Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, having unfinished buildings rotting and collapsing on people will definitely help our cause.
Oh, and the workers will go bankrupt if they can’t work.
But keep up the armchair opining.
And the mayor (or at least her perpetual campaign cash operation) will go bankrupt if the big developers are feeling less generous in their, uh, civic appreciation.
You act as if the Mayor is all powerful. You speak as though she and she alone has the ability to shut down construction projects. Ask yourself this finger-pointer... Why haven't the construction workers themselves simply put their foot down and refused to continue these nonessential projects? Do you not think that their voices hold any significance? Why haven't their labor unions raised exercised their authority in protest against being forced to endure unsafe working conditions and continue building frivolous flats in the middle of a pandemic? Do you not think that their influence carries any weight? Tell us critic, how has the Mayor in her preeminence managed to silence both the workers and the labor unions?
As people start to get sick, they will. Read up on what has happened in NY. But do we need to wait for them to get so frightened that they stop coming to work? Which projects are worth getting sick or dying for?
I do not believe your response addresses the actual query posed by the previous poster with regard to how the purportedly omnipotent Mayor has come to wield so much power over these other ordinarily equally powerful parties. Did you wish to address this?
It’s the developers who are the powerful ones. Bowser is just their paid Hoe.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, having unfinished buildings rotting and collapsing on people will definitely help our cause.
Oh, and the workers will go bankrupt if they can’t work.
But keep up the armchair opining.
And the mayor (or at least her perpetual campaign cash operation) will go bankrupt if the big developers are feeling less generous in their, uh, civic appreciation.
You act as if the Mayor is all powerful. You speak as though she and she alone has the ability to shut down construction projects. Ask yourself this finger-pointer... Why haven't the construction workers themselves simply put their foot down and refused to continue these nonessential projects? Do you not think that their voices hold any significance? Why haven't their labor unions raised exercised their authority in protest against being forced to endure unsafe working conditions and continue building frivolous flats in the middle of a pandemic? Do you not think that their influence carries any weight? Tell us critic, how has the Mayor in her preeminence managed to silence both the workers and the labor unions?
As people start to get sick, they will. Read up on what has happened in NY. But do we need to wait for them to get so frightened that they stop coming to work? Which projects are worth getting sick or dying for?
I do not believe your response addresses the actual query posed by the previous poster with regard to how the purportedly omnipotent Mayor has come to wield so much power over these other ordinarily equally powerful parties. Did you wish to address this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, having unfinished buildings rotting and collapsing on people will definitely help our cause.
Oh, and the workers will go bankrupt if they can’t work.
But keep up the armchair opining.
And the mayor (or at least her perpetual campaign cash operation) will go bankrupt if the big developers are feeling less generous in their, uh, civic appreciation.
You act as if the Mayor is all powerful. You speak as though she and she alone has the ability to shut down construction projects. Ask yourself this finger-pointer... Why haven't the construction workers themselves simply put their foot down and refused to continue these nonessential projects? Do you not think that their voices hold any significance? Why haven't their labor unions raised exercised their authority in protest against being forced to endure unsafe working conditions and continue building frivolous flats in the middle of a pandemic? Do you not think that their influence carries any weight? Tell us critic, how has the Mayor in her preeminence managed to silence both the workers and the labor unions?
As people start to get sick, they will. Read up on what has happened in NY. But do we need to wait for them to get so frightened that they stop coming to work? Which projects are worth getting sick or dying for?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, having unfinished buildings rotting and collapsing on people will definitely help our cause.
Oh, and the workers will go bankrupt if they can’t work.
But keep up the armchair opining.
And the mayor (or at least her perpetual campaign cash operation) will go bankrupt if the big developers are feeling less generous in their, uh, civic appreciation.
You act as if the Mayor is all powerful. You speak as though she and she alone has the ability to shut down construction projects. Ask yourself this finger-pointer... Why haven't the construction workers themselves simply put their foot down and refused to continue these nonessential projects? Do you not think that their voices hold any significance? Why haven't their labor unions raised exercised their authority in protest against being forced to endure unsafe working conditions and continue building frivolous flats in the middle of a pandemic? Do you not think that their influence carries any weight? Tell us critic, how has the Mayor in her preeminence managed to silence both the workers and the labor unions?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, having unfinished buildings rotting and collapsing on people will definitely help our cause.
Oh, and the workers will go bankrupt if they can’t work.
But keep up the armchair opining.
And the mayor (or at least her perpetual campaign cash operation) will go bankrupt if the big developers are feeling less generous in their, uh, civic appreciation.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, having unfinished buildings rotting and collapsing on people will definitely help our cause.
Oh, and the workers will go bankrupt if they can’t work.
But keep up the armchair opining.
Anonymous wrote:The vast majority of construction work is only essential from an economic standpoint. However, given that shelter is an essential need, one could argue that continuing to supply the continued housing needs of a community makes housing projects more essential than nonresidential projects.[/quote
These market rate projects are all built on spec. And DC’s Chief Financial Officer estimates that the city’s population is increasing slowly if at all (contradicting the office of planning’s irrationally exuberant talking points). Not exactly justifying large residential and mixed use projects as “essential” or emergency activity.
Anonymous wrote:Builders say shutting down a job site is less like shuttering a restaurant than firing the chef while the roast is in the oven. If you abandoned a project halfway, materials like insulation and exposed wiring degrade in the elements. “There’s a sense that a 100-year-old building will deteriorate but continue to perform its job,” said Ehren Gresehover, a structural engineer in New York. “But when you start opening things up, start demo’ing a little slab, you might unbrace a column, and that column has temporary shoring, or perhaps it’s only temporary braced, and that’s less stable.” What’s safe for a weekend might not be safe for several months unattended. Once a project gets underway, developers say, the timeline is tight. Skilled workers are in high demand. “Construction is like a train,” one Chicago developer told me. “If you stop a welder, it could take two months to get them back on site.” Delays can break contracts, they say, triggering expensive legal fights or jeopardizing the leases that future tenants have signed.
Anonymous wrote:This is happening everywhere. It isn’t fair to the workers and their families.