Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who regulates the trucks on the National Mall? The National Park Service or the DC government? If the latter, don't hold your breath. The DC Council in another spasm of "progressive" legislation basically eliminated the permit system for street vendors. Now one sees on the street outside retailers pop-up vendor tables that sell the very merchandise that thieves just stole from the stores!
It’s the DC government. And the food trucks are also parking inside the mall. It looks and smells so trashy.
I have never, in real life, encountered anyone using DCUM's favorite pejorative adjective. I guess I live in a bubble.
How about crowded, dirty, polluted (both noise and air), unkempt and personally overwhelming. The food is not even good. It’s repetitive and expensive.
Yes, tourist attractions typically are crowded, especially during tourist season. If I considered a place to be so awful, I would simply avoid visiting it.
OP here. My issue is mostly the the lack of high environmental standards in the heart of the nation’s capital. That’s a shame that sadly reflects our culture of unbothered greed, consumption, and pollution.
Anonymous wrote:Why not use the mall as a temporary shelter for migrants and the unhoused?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who regulates the trucks on the National Mall? The National Park Service or the DC government? If the latter, don't hold your breath. The DC Council in another spasm of "progressive" legislation basically eliminated the permit system for street vendors. Now one sees on the street outside retailers pop-up vendor tables that sell the very merchandise that thieves just stole from the stores!
It’s the DC government. And the food trucks are also parking inside the mall. It looks and smells so trashy.
I have never, in real life, encountered anyone using DCUM's favorite pejorative adjective. I guess I live in a bubble.
How about crowded, dirty, polluted (both noise and air), unkempt and personally overwhelming. The food is not even good. It’s repetitive and expensive.
Yes, tourist attractions typically are crowded, especially during tourist season. If I considered a place to be so awful, I would simply avoid visiting it.
OP here. My issue is mostly the the lack of high environmental standards in the heart of the nation’s capital. That’s a shame that sadly reflects our culture of unbothered greed, consumption, and pollution.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who regulates the trucks on the National Mall? The National Park Service or the DC government? If the latter, don't hold your breath. The DC Council in another spasm of "progressive" legislation basically eliminated the permit system for street vendors. Now one sees on the street outside retailers pop-up vendor tables that sell the very merchandise that thieves just stole from the stores!
It’s the DC government. And the food trucks are also parking inside the mall. It looks and smells so trashy.
I have never, in real life, encountered anyone using DCUM's favorite pejorative adjective. I guess I live in a bubble.
How about crowded, dirty, polluted (both noise and air), unkempt and personally overwhelming. The food is not even good. It’s repetitive and expensive.
Yes, tourist attractions typically are crowded, especially during tourist season. If I considered a place to be so awful, I would simply avoid visiting it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why not use the mall as a temporary shelter for migrants and the unhoused?
I am assuming this was sarcasm
Anonymous wrote:Why not use the mall as a temporary shelter for migrants and the unhoused?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who regulates the trucks on the National Mall? The National Park Service or the DC government? If the latter, don't hold your breath. The DC Council in another spasm of "progressive" legislation basically eliminated the permit system for street vendors. Now one sees on the street outside retailers pop-up vendor tables that sell the very merchandise that thieves just stole from the stores!
It’s the DC government. And the food trucks are also parking inside the mall. It looks and smells so trashy.
I have never, in real life, encountered anyone using DCUM's favorite pejorative adjective. I guess I live in a bubble.
How about crowded, dirty, polluted (both noise and air), unkempt and personally overwhelming. The food is not even good. It’s repetitive and expensive.
Anonymous wrote:I'm French. Coming from Europe, where big cities generally have lots of food options with walking distance of main tourist attractions, the DC food desert near the monuments was a shock when my relatives and I first visited. Now if I'm in the area, I go to the American Indian museum restaurant, the food is half decent, plus I love the building.
So yes, I agree with your complaints, OP. DC in general is a very strange capital city. It has a provincial atmosphere - which is nice if you live in NW! But this is why a lot of people in the world still think NYC is the capital of the USA...![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who regulates the trucks on the National Mall? The National Park Service or the DC government? If the latter, don't hold your breath. The DC Council in another spasm of "progressive" legislation basically eliminated the permit system for street vendors. Now one sees on the street outside retailers pop-up vendor tables that sell the very merchandise that thieves just stole from the stores!
It’s the DC government. And the food trucks are also parking inside the mall. It looks and smells so trashy.
I have never, in real life, encountered anyone using DCUM's favorite pejorative adjective. I guess I live in a bubble.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hate those stupid trucks. I would be fine with a few good ones (with no music!) but it's out of control. I saw that the Park Police recently cracked down and towed a bunch but they need to do it more often.
The need to setup a regulatory structure for the trucks - code of conduct, permitting, food safety, truck safety regs (fyi - food trucks catch on fire A LOT), etc.
The problem is that NPS actually has food service installations on the mall (run by a contractor) and they give concessioner a monopoly on food sales. So the Feds can't actually set up a regulatory system for the food trucks.
It's maddening.
Most of the trucks don’t even have DC tags. I could see supporting people from the District operating food trucks but definitely not people from Maryland or Virginia.