Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Better yet - perhaps Ward 3ers should not have thrown Gray under the bus. I voted for Gray in primary and wrote him in for general. Loathed Catania and believed that Bowser lacked the experience for the post. Her lack of chops is seen in these deals - she wants residents' unconditional support yet the developer-owners can flip these buildings from shelters to rehab clinics over the course of their leases then drop apartment buildings in SFH zoning @ end. How can she really face the voters or council members when she is asking them to pay more than 3X the cost for the construction?
Better yet -- Fenty will come back to run for a second term.
Is it too much to ask to have a clean and competent Democrat running for office? (in our city, no independent stands a chance)
Anonymous wrote:Maybe Mary Cheh should put a homeless shelter across the street from her home.
Anonymous wrote:Better yet - perhaps Ward 3ers should not have thrown Gray under the bus. I voted for Gray in primary and wrote him in for general. Loathed Catania and believed that Bowser lacked the experience for the post. Her lack of chops is seen in these deals - she wants residents' unconditional support yet the developer-owners can flip these buildings from shelters to rehab clinics over the course of their leases then drop apartment buildings in SFH zoning @ end. How can she really face the voters or council members when she is asking them to pay more than 3X the cost for the construction?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:More scrutiny for Bowser's plan. This is pretty damning. A good read. https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/virginia-politics/real-estate-decisions-imperil-dc-mayors-ambitious-plan-for-homeless-families/2016/04/17/6bb6291c-00c4-11e6-b823-707c79ce3504_story.html
Yes. Why should folks have to pay more than triple the price yet residents are in substandard facilities (2 bath tubs for 40 families)? $5K for durable surfaces? The granite 2 BR, 2 B luxury condos have durable granite surfaces but not that price tag.
This is going to become a national joke.
Mea culpa...I didn't trust Catania's temperament, so voted for Bowser. Big mistake.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:More scrutiny for Bowser's plan. This is pretty damning. A good read. https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/virginia-politics/real-estate-decisions-imperil-dc-mayors-ambitious-plan-for-homeless-families/2016/04/17/6bb6291c-00c4-11e6-b823-707c79ce3504_story.html
Yes. Why should folks have to pay more than triple the price yet residents are in substandard facilities (2 bath tubs for 40 families)? $5K for durable surfaces? The granite 2 BR, 2 B luxury condos have durable granite surfaces but not that price tag.
Anonymous wrote:More scrutiny for Bowser's plan. This is pretty damning. A good read. https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/virginia-politics/real-estate-decisions-imperil-dc-mayors-ambitious-plan-for-homeless-families/2016/04/17/6bb6291c-00c4-11e6-b823-707c79ce3504_story.html
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:More scrutiny for Bowser's plan. This is pretty damning. A good read. https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/virginia-politics/real-estate-decisions-imperil-dc-mayors-ambitious-plan-for-homeless-families/2016/04/17/6bb6291c-00c4-11e6-b823-707c79ce3504_story.html
Seems half baked and generally irresponsible to even bring it to council for approval. Probably par for the course, however. Hopefully Mary Cheh et al will make Bowser take this back, rework and bring something better to the table.
Anonymous wrote:More scrutiny for Bowser's plan. This is pretty damning. A good read. https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/virginia-politics/real-estate-decisions-imperil-dc-mayors-ambitious-plan-for-homeless-families/2016/04/17/6bb6291c-00c4-11e6-b823-707c79ce3504_story.html
At a hearing last week, DHS Director Clarence H. Carter said that the agency searched for an alternative location to shelter families and that the best facility was at 1125 Spring Rd. NW, a former Hebrew Home for the Aged and more recently a mental health center. ... But the Spring Road building has since been removed from consideration, Carter said during the hearing. Council member Muriel Bowser (D-Ward 4) said that her community has an "inordinate amount of group homes" and that Spring Road has two homeless shelters: a men's transitional shelter and an 88-room family shelter. ... She agreed that more shelter space is needed and suggested that other options, namely expanding D.C. General, be reevaluated. "This is a very tight, dense residential neighborhood," she said of the Spring Road community. In contrast, the D.C. General shelter is on "a wide-open campus, a campus that, given the resources could accommodate these people."