Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Quick, who wants to open a restaurant?
Would a food truck count.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Downtown is dead but go into ay DC neighborhood like Shaw, Petworth, Columbia Heights and you'll see restaurants and bars thriving. But they still need help. That's what this grant is trying to do. Not help the big investors but the small business owner who employs her neighbors. $50k is a drop int he bucket to the corporate handouts that are given but everyone is up in arms. And that $50k investment gets spent in the community, employing people, buying from other local businesses, paying taxes
What an incredible waste of tax dollars. People don't go out to eat because it's expensive as fkuc and there's nowhere to park.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So now we have welfare for restaurants?
How about some welfare for taxpayers?
Anonymous wrote:Downtown is dead but go into ay DC neighborhood like Shaw, Petworth, Columbia Heights and you'll see restaurants and bars thriving. But they still need help. That's what this grant is trying to do. Not help the big investors but the small business owner who employs her neighbors. $50k is a drop int he bucket to the corporate handouts that are given but everyone is up in arms. And that $50k investment gets spent in the community, employing people, buying from other local businesses, paying taxes
Anonymous wrote:Is $50K enough to save a restaurant? Maybe for a few weeks, or less...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No one wants to go into crime ridden DC and pay exorbitant prices to support a minimum wage that is pegged way too high.
Maybe electing people with common sense and basic economic skills should be a priority if the district wants to survive. Maybe some more tourist based taxes will save the day.
Crime ridden DC? DC is on track to finish 2026 with under 100 murders. The last time it did that was in 2012 (only 88 murders).
DC has only had less than 100 murders once in the past 50 years. Crime is generally down 35% relative to last year, and last year was considered an amazing improvement.
The problem is that DC has the worst unemployment rate in the entire country due to DOGE.
Anonymous wrote:No one wants to go into crime ridden DC and pay exorbitant prices to support a minimum wage that is pegged way too high.
Maybe electing people with common sense and basic economic skills should be a priority if the district wants to survive. Maybe some more tourist based taxes will save the day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This isn't about I-82.
It is about the decimation, between COVID and trump layoffs, of downtown DC.
+1 I think this is a half-baked idea, but trying to tie it to "progressive ideals" is pretty far-fetched. Was it progressive to bail out the banks or auto manufacturers? Why is it only a problem if the money goes to a non-billionaire?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So now we have welfare for restaurants?
How about some welfare for taxpayers?
Anonymous wrote:So now we have welfare for restaurants?