Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“I’m here representing a voice that is not being listened to, and that is the Blackfeet Tribe in Montana and the Wetzel family,” Daines said, according to the Washington Post. “I serve them. … I’m here representing my constituents.”
Problem is he actually gets a vote to represent his constituents, who will probably never set foot on RFK soil
But the people who live adjacent to the stadium don't get to have a senator who has a vote. We have nobody to serve us or represent us in any meaningful way- because shadow representatives can't.
Here’s an idea. Why doesn’t the Federal government put this land up for auction like it does for surplus property. Would that be fair enough for you?
Are you trying to be snarky?
The idea of the federal government selling the RFK land was actually proposed and discussed in a prior house committee meeting some years ago, and I do believe it was a republican representative from some flyover state who proposed it. So then DC actually put forth a bill to purchase it and it never went anywhere.
Problem is, literally cannot get any bill to get to any final vote in both houses because we do not have a representative who has a vote, which gives negotiating power for smaller issues that the majority of the US doesn't care about.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“I’m here representing a voice that is not being listened to, and that is the Blackfeet Tribe in Montana and the Wetzel family,” Daines said, according to the Washington Post. “I serve them. … I’m here representing my constituents.”
Problem is he actually gets a vote to represent his constituents, who will probably never set foot on RFK soil
But the people who live adjacent to the stadium don't get to have a senator who has a vote. We have nobody to serve us or represent us in any meaningful way- because shadow representatives can't.
Here’s an idea. Why doesn’t the Federal government put this land up for auction like it does for surplus property. Would that be fair enough for you?
Anonymous wrote:“I’m here representing a voice that is not being listened to, and that is the Blackfeet Tribe in Montana and the Wetzel family,” Daines said, according to the Washington Post. “I serve them. … I’m here representing my constituents.”
Problem is he actually gets a vote to represent his constituents, who will probably never set foot on RFK soil
But the people who live adjacent to the stadium don't get to have a senator who has a vote. We have nobody to serve us or represent us in any meaningful way- because shadow representatives can't.
Anonymous wrote:I literally do not understand Daines's opposition on this. He wants the original logo to remain? Does the Wetzel family get some sort of monetary residuals for use of the logo?
This is so utterly bizarre.
Anonymous wrote:So of course, republicans will eff the progress on this bill.
Who cares about the local DC citizens who live adjacent to this blighted piece of asphalt that the US Government has no invested interest in owning.
Some senator from Montana who will never go near that property will eff us all in the end.
Party of small government, my *ss. They're all power shills.
https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/nfl/commanders/2024/05/17/rfk-stadium-bill-washington-commanders/73674036007/
Anonymous wrote:Who cares about Rock Creek? The point is that the RFK area has a great opportunity to improve and extend park land, improve Kingman and Heritage Islands with tie ins to Anacostia Park, the Arboretum, etc. and add pedestrian bridges for better access on both sides of the river. An additional metro stop could easily be done at Benning Rd and Oklahoma Ave
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I mean you can drive to Kingman Island and park your car there, how else do you get to any other park trail? You can also easily bike to it via the Anacostia Riverwalk trail that goes by the Kenilworth Acquatic Garden, Boathouse, down to Navy Yard, etc.,
Unclear what more you want? It's easier to get to Kingman Island than some other parks in DC as the parking is far more plentiful by it and it's immediately accessible off of a protected bike trail.
Accessible by foot from an area of moderate density (rowhouses, apartments, some commercial) with excellent public transit access (Metrorail, bus, etc.). Cars and freeway (or other pedestrian unfriendly access) don’t count towards accessibility.
Rock Creek Park has excellent hiking trails and some small picnic meadows but it is largely a wilderness park mostly accessible from the lowest density parts of the city. The portion of the park in Georgetown is a bit on the narrow side and borders the parkway where it is more of a commuter thruway. The most accessible portion of Rock Creek Park is the zoo itself.
You either don't know where Rock Creek Park is, or you don't know anything about the many areas abutting it. It is accessible from many densely populated areas.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I mean you can drive to Kingman Island and park your car there, how else do you get to any other park trail? You can also easily bike to it via the Anacostia Riverwalk trail that goes by the Kenilworth Acquatic Garden, Boathouse, down to Navy Yard, etc.,
Unclear what more you want? It's easier to get to Kingman Island than some other parks in DC as the parking is far more plentiful by it and it's immediately accessible off of a protected bike trail.
Accessible by foot from an area of moderate density (rowhouses, apartments, some commercial) with excellent public transit access (Metrorail, bus, etc.). Cars and freeway (or other pedestrian unfriendly access) don’t count towards accessibility.
Rock Creek Park has excellent hiking trails and some small picnic meadows but it is largely a wilderness park mostly accessible from the lowest density parts of the city. The portion of the park in Georgetown is a bit on the narrow side and borders the parkway where it is more of a commuter thruway. The most accessible portion of Rock Creek Park is the zoo itself.
Just put that fantasy away. A giant parcel of metro-accessible land is not fodder for some Olmstead fantasy. It will be mixed use.
You mean like Central Park?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I mean you can drive to Kingman Island and park your car there, how else do you get to any other park trail? You can also easily bike to it via the Anacostia Riverwalk trail that goes by the Kenilworth Acquatic Garden, Boathouse, down to Navy Yard, etc.,
Unclear what more you want? It's easier to get to Kingman Island than some other parks in DC as the parking is far more plentiful by it and it's immediately accessible off of a protected bike trail.
Accessible by foot from an area of moderate density (rowhouses, apartments, some commercial) with excellent public transit access (Metrorail, bus, etc.). Cars and freeway (or other pedestrian unfriendly access) don’t count towards accessibility.
Rock Creek Park has excellent hiking trails and some small picnic meadows but it is largely a wilderness park mostly accessible from the lowest density parts of the city. The portion of the park in Georgetown is a bit on the narrow side and borders the parkway where it is more of a commuter thruway. The most accessible portion of Rock Creek Park is the zoo itself.