Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is not fake news but the story is seven months old. I know the owner at Pursuit and he's been instrumental in getting attention on the very real problem of crime on H Street. Pursuit is alive and well and the businesses on the street are fighting. One of the things they've gotten is increased police presence to prevent incidents like this.
Anonymous wrote:Get involved with your ANC, with ANC committees, and with local business-run initiatives instead of just posting here. We have to take the reins back from from soft-on-crime progressives. But it will take effort beyond just posting anonymous messages.
Volunteer in local elections. In 2026, volunteer to get Allen, Nadeau, Lewis George, and Schwalb voted out of office.
And thank police officers for their service. Let them know that the rational liberals of DC don't judge everyone in a group by the actions of a small number of people in that group.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The reason that DC businesses are closing isn’t so much because of crime but because they need more customers. More density and vibrancy will bring more customers.
People start avoiding places when there's a huge increase in crime. Eventually, people even start moving away. I've been surprised by the number of long-time acquaintances (including people from here) I've talked to recently who have started looking into moving elsewhere.
I agree that it's probably a combination of factors, but crime seems to be one of the biggest issues dragging the city down at this point.
H Street resident here and yes, it's a confluence of factors, but I'm not sure you understand the interplay.
ALL of this links back to Covid. People stayed home during Covid because they had to. Businesses were closed. As things reopened, crowds didn't come back at the same levels. Prices absolutely went up, for various reasons, and that dampened enthusiasm for returning to prior levels. Also some businesses didn't survive the shit down, and fewer places overall made H less of a destination. All of this happened independent of the crime issues.
But the crime issues worsened during this time. When everything closed, we saw big increases in vagrancy and loitering along H. Without more people out and about, this contributed to a sense of unease. Panhandling increased. Crime was going up in the city all over, but the shuttered businesses and more of a sense of lawlessness I think really encouraged crime on a H.
And then of course the crime, panhandling, and vagrancy has an impact on businesses, and it spirals down. It's been very frustrating to watch.
Anonymous wrote:Shouldn’t a neighborhood bar do BETTER in a work from home environment?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The reason that DC businesses are closing isn’t so much because of crime but because they need more customers. More density and vibrancy will bring more customers.
People start avoiding places when there's a huge increase in crime. Eventually, people even start moving away. I've been surprised by the number of long-time acquaintances (including people from here) I've talked to recently who have started looking into moving elsewhere.
I agree that it's probably a combination of factors, but crime seems to be one of the biggest issues dragging the city down at this point.
H Street resident here and yes, it's a confluence of factors, but I'm not sure you understand the interplay.
ALL of this links back to Covid. People stayed home during Covid because they had to. Businesses were closed. As things reopened, crowds didn't come back at the same levels. Prices absolutely went up, for various reasons, and that dampened enthusiasm for returning to prior levels. Also some businesses didn't survive the shit down, and fewer places overall made H less of a destination. All of this happened independent of the crime issues.
But the crime issues worsened during this time. When everything closed, we saw big increases in vagrancy and loitering along H. Without more people out and about, this contributed to a sense of unease. Panhandling increased. Crime was going up in the city all over, but the shuttered businesses and more of a sense of lawlessness I think really encouraged crime on a H.
And then of course the crime, panhandling, and vagrancy has an impact on businesses, and it spirals down. It's been very frustrating to watch.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The reason that DC businesses are closing isn’t so much because of crime but because they need more customers. More density and vibrancy will bring more customers.
People start avoiding places when there's a huge increase in crime. Eventually, people even start moving away. I've been surprised by the number of long-time acquaintances (including people from here) I've talked to recently who have started looking into moving elsewhere.
I agree that it's probably a combination of factors, but crime seems to be one of the biggest issues dragging the city down at this point.
Anonymous wrote:Not victim blaming but I'm curious about what kind of glass, commercial door he has. His business must have been really insecure to get robbed 3 times in the span of 6 weeks.
Anonymous wrote:Not victim blaming but I'm curious about what kind of glass, commercial door he has. His business must have been really insecure to get robbed 3 times in the span of 6 weeks.