Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel like the city can be propped up pretty well by wards WOTP because if you look at maps at all the carjackings and shootings, there are very very few west of the park. Anecdotally I see less extreme antisocial driving over there too. Those people aren’t the ones hearing gunshots daily and choosing to vote with their feet and leave. It’s the high income people in the previously gentrifying areas. The city will lose part of its tax base and I think already is, but will get by with some belt tightening due to the absurd amount of wealth that will stay in WOTP completely unbothered. Their taxes may go up some.
You know there are a lot of wonderful neighborhoods EOTP that have no issues with crime right? Everything does not revolve around WOTP. I live in NE and live in a wonderful part of town. The houses are still going quickly. You are very limited in your thinking of DC.
These people here still think it's like 1995 and going east of 16th street is harrowing. It's absurd.
Beautiful neighborhoods and lots of mixing of nationalities, backgrounds, races, etc occur in tons of neighborhoods east of 16th and north of the capitol complex.
Right. Beautiful neighborhoods where you would never allow your child to attend their local public school. Got it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Remember the movie Escape from New York? That is the fate of all democratically run major cities over the next decade or two.
#Truth
The Democrats have run our cities into the ground.
Anonymous wrote:Remember the movie Escape from New York? That is the fate of all democratically run major cities over the next decade or two.
Anonymous wrote:Remember the movie Escape from New York? That is the fate of all democratically run major cities over the next decade or two.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel like the city can be propped up pretty well by wards WOTP because if you look at maps at all the carjackings and shootings, there are very very few west of the park. Anecdotally I see less extreme antisocial driving over there too. Those people aren’t the ones hearing gunshots daily and choosing to vote with their feet and leave. It’s the high income people in the previously gentrifying areas. The city will lose part of its tax base and I think already is, but will get by with some belt tightening due to the absurd amount of wealth that will stay in WOTP completely unbothered. Their taxes may go up some.
You know there are a lot of wonderful neighborhoods EOTP that have no issues with crime right? Everything does not revolve around WOTP. I live in NE and live in a wonderful part of town. The houses are still going quickly. You are very limited in your thinking of DC.
These people here still think it's like 1995 and going east of 16th street is harrowing. It's absurd.
Beautiful neighborhoods and lots of mixing of nationalities, backgrounds, races, etc occur in tons of neighborhoods east of 16th and north of the capitol complex.
Right. Beautiful neighborhoods where you would never allow your child to attend their local public school. Got it.

Anonymous wrote:Yes, definitely if the Feds don’t return to work at least 3 days a week the hospitality industry will collapse and the tax base along with it. DC will be just like San Francisco in 2-3 years if work from home continues.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel like the city can be propped up pretty well by wards WOTP because if you look at maps at all the carjackings and shootings, there are very very few west of the park. Anecdotally I see less extreme antisocial driving over there too. Those people aren’t the ones hearing gunshots daily and choosing to vote with their feet and leave. It’s the high income people in the previously gentrifying areas. The city will lose part of its tax base and I think already is, but will get by with some belt tightening due to the absurd amount of wealth that will stay in WOTP completely unbothered. Their taxes may go up some.
You know there are a lot of wonderful neighborhoods EOTP that have no issues with crime right? Everything does not revolve around WOTP. I live in NE and live in a wonderful part of town. The houses are still going quickly. You are very limited in your thinking of DC.
These people here still think it's like 1995 and going east of 16th street is harrowing. It's absurd.
Beautiful neighborhoods and lots of mixing of nationalities, backgrounds, races, etc occur in tons of neighborhoods east of 16th and north of the capitol complex.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel like the city can be propped up pretty well by wards WOTP because if you look at maps at all the carjackings and shootings, there are very very few west of the park. Anecdotally I see less extreme antisocial driving over there too. Those people aren’t the ones hearing gunshots daily and choosing to vote with their feet and leave. It’s the high income people in the previously gentrifying areas. The city will lose part of its tax base and I think already is, but will get by with some belt tightening due to the absurd amount of wealth that will stay in WOTP completely unbothered. Their taxes may go up some.
You know there are a lot of wonderful neighborhoods EOTP that have no issues with crime right? Everything does not revolve around WOTP. I live in NE and live in a wonderful part of town. The houses are still going quickly. You are very limited in your thinking of DC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Feds are moving back into the office minium of 3 days/week before 2024 election. It’s happening.
+1 OPM will be doing a very aggressive push this fall for BTO. By spring ‘24 most agencies with offices in DC will be back in the majority of the week.
Good luck with that, lol.
We recently hired in our agency, and so many of the younger applicants are simply not going to take the job if they are required to come in person. We've already had difficulty filling positions.
A lot of the private sector allows full-time telework. They can make more money working in the private sector, AND have more flexibility.
The percentage of job listings that even offer hybrid work is shockingly small:
![]()
Source: https://apolloacademy.com/job-openings-offering-work-from-home/
That seems to mix blue and white collar jobs. In cities like DC, its the white collar jobs that are going to move the needle.
Anonymous wrote:I feel like the city can be propped up pretty well by wards WOTP because if you look at maps at all the carjackings and shootings, there are very very few west of the park. Anecdotally I see less extreme antisocial driving over there too. Those people aren’t the ones hearing gunshots daily and choosing to vote with their feet and leave. It’s the high income people in the previously gentrifying areas. The city will lose part of its tax base and I think already is, but will get by with some belt tightening due to the absurd amount of wealth that will stay in WOTP completely unbothered. Their taxes may go up some.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Feds are moving back into the office minium of 3 days/week before 2024 election. It’s happening.
+1 OPM will be doing a very aggressive push this fall for BTO. By spring ‘24 most agencies with offices in DC will be back in the majority of the week.
Good luck with that, lol.
We recently hired in our agency, and so many of the younger applicants are simply not going to take the job if they are required to come in person. We've already had difficulty filling positions.
A lot of the private sector allows full-time telework. They can make more money working in the private sector, AND have more flexibility.
The percentage of job listings that even offer hybrid work is shockingly small:
![]()
Source: https://apolloacademy.com/job-openings-offering-work-from-home/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Feds are moving back into the office minium of 3 days/week before 2024 election. It’s happening.
+1 OPM will be doing a very aggressive push this fall for BTO. By spring ‘24 most agencies with offices in DC will be back in the majority of the week.
Good luck with that, lol.
We recently hired in our agency, and so many of the younger applicants are simply not going to take the job if they are required to come in person. We've already had difficulty filling positions.
A lot of the private sector allows full-time telework. They can make more money working in the private sector, AND have more flexibility.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:According to DCUM, DC has been dying for 40 years.
The trajectory DC was on in the Williams/Fenty era is what people compare back to. There was hope that the whole city was on the right-path. Its been a lot of two-steps forward two-steps back since. Progress is very neighborhood or even block specific.