Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Hopefully there is no such other arrangement in the city.
There definitely are. Why can't Hardy use Guy Mason? I think Georgetown U has their hooks in there. I think AU has some deal with city-owned property at the park on Massachusetts Avenue. Ellington, UDC -- there's probably more.
If I were a councilmember I would be asking for an accounting of all of these deals, what the terms are, who the parties are, and when they expire.
Agreed-this woman wrote a good accounting of all the deals that are not in the public interest, but Jelleff is the one we have a chance to influence now.
https://thedcline.org/2019/09/12/jonetta-rose-barras-the-dc-councils-fall-fight/
After learning that the Department of Parks and Recreation had renewed its multi-year lease with the private Maret School — giving it priority use of the playing field at Jelleff Recreation Center over public institutions like Hardy Middle School — Silverman asked DC Attorney General Karl Racine to review the agreement. She said that even if the agreement can’t be rescinded, she is hoping for a way to renegotiate the terms to allow for increased use by DC residents.
“Our obligation is to provide a good quality of life for our residents,” she continued, adding that this should include access to the city’s parks and recreation centers.
Focusing solely on Maret obfuscates the larger policy problem, however. In the late 1990s, struggling to stay afloat financially, the government used third-party organizations to help it maintain its infrastructure and meet program service needs. The practice continued even as the District’s financial condition improved. These agreements resulted in organizations gaining priority use over that of taxpayers. For example, Georgetown University’s softball team claims Guy Mason athletic field as its home turf. I was excoriated years ago when I raised questions about three baseball organizations — Home Run Baseball Camp, Headfirst, and Northwest Washington Little League — that critics said acted as a sort of sports mafia, using Friendship Park fields as their private preserve, with the city government reaping little financial benefit; it was only when the two founders of Headfirst began fighting over profits of its multi-million dollar operation that District residents learned just how lucrative those businesses had been. And Silverman acknowledged that Howard University has an agreement that gives it extensive control of the Banneker Recreation Center tennis courts.
“The DPR should disclose all deals, the terms of the contracts, when they are expiring, if there are extensions and [give] the community full transparency about this,” said Silverman. “We should be looking for a more global solution.”