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Georgetowner Readers Weigh In on Streateries
Who Lives Here Georgetown
• October 17, 2013
Each year around the Georgetowner’s anniversary, we list a few of the more famous who live in this remarkable neighborhood, so full of history, so grateful of its present well-to-do situation — and so hopeful of its future achievers, now arriving or being born.
Those who lived in Georgetown include Thomas Jefferson,
William Corcoran, Francis Scott Key, Alexander Graham Bell, Jack and Jackie Kennedy, Bobby and Ethel Kennedy, Bill Clinton, Averell and Pamela Harriman, Elizabeth Taylor and John Warner, Henry Kissinger, Pierre Salinger, Dean Acheson and Herblock.
As we say at the Georgetowner, “Once a Georgetowner,
always a Georgetowner.”
1) Madeleine Albright
This professor might have some pointers for her neighbor, Secretary of State Kerry.
2) Robert Allbritton
Would it be impolitic to say we really like that big Q Street house and will attend the next big party?
3) Tina Alster + Paul Frazier
Great skin doctor, great house and hubby, too.
4) Elizabeth Bagley
A favorite D.C. influencer and ambassador, whose home receptions are a presidential must-attend.
5) Ben Bradlee + Sally Quinn
If one living couple can make you think “Georgetown!” instantly, it’s these renowned Posties.
6) Calvin + Jane Cafritz
Great supporters of the Washington National Opera
7) Bill Dean
His Halloween party is up next: get ready for the sexy ghouls.
8) Maureen Dowd
This NYT columnist lives in a JFK house with a juke box in the living room. Fear her, too.
9) Mark Ein
High-tech entrepreneur Ein used the old Graham estate on R Street for something really important: his wedding to Sally Stiebel.
10) Jack + Michele Evans
Ward 2 Councilman Jack Evans could become the next Mayor of Washington, D.C.
11) Rep. Rodney Frelinghuysen
This Procter & Gamble heir chased down a pickpocket six years ago, leading to the arrest of an 18-year-old suspect.
12) C. Boyden Gray
He is no dude, just one of Georgetown’s classic gentlemen.
13) Walter Issacson
The Aspen Institute? A book on Steve Jobs? This dude is busy.
14) Hugh Newell Jacobsen
Georgetown’s beloved architect has his influence all around us and beyond. Check out Boxwood Winery in Middleburg.
15) Kitty Kelley
The famous fear her pen. She may be tough, but she is awfully nice to us.
16) John Kerry
He and his wife Teresa Heinz live in the Bodesco House on O Street.
17) Anthony Lanier
The man who transformed M Street is going strong and still has his sense of humor.
18) Mark Lerner
He likes to play major ball, as in Major League Baseball. Go, Nats!
19) Sen. Joe Lieberman
The good senator walks most Saturdays to Kesher Israel at 28th and N Streetsfrom Hillandale.
20) Anne Nitze
This hostess makes the classic cool.
21) Nancy Pelosi
A Trinity gal, who married a Hoya guy, and lives down by the river. What’s not to like?
22) Kevin Plank
The “sweatiest guy on the football field” became a billionaire.
23) Bill Plant
The CBS News White House correspondent can also be seen at Holy Trinity Church.
24) Nora Poullon
She is America’s first certified restauranteur.
25) Michael Saylor
MicroStrategy founder advocates that education should be free and is three a sailor (really, a yachtsman).
26) Tom + Carol Wheeler
The new FCC chair has been called “the ultimate D.C. insider.”
27) Bob Woodward
Washington Post, Watergate, insider stories and still at his Post.
Mayor Gray Rejects Government Shutdown in the City
• October 10, 2013
The District of Columbia is standing up to the federal government. While the feds continue toying with a potential Oct. 1 government shutdown, Mayor Vincent Gray has stated that the city won’t be taking part in any government hiatus.
“I have determined that everything the District government does – protecting the health, safety and welfare of our residents and visitors – is essential,” said Mayor Gray Sept. 25.
In the past, a federal government shutdown would also mean a shutdown for D.C. government, as the District is not a state and is thus directly vulnerable to Congress’s decisions. The District’s organizations deemed crucial – such as public schools and police and fire departments– would have remained open, but the libraries, recreation centers and trash services would stop operations.
In accordance with Gray’s statement, however, it seems that the D.C. government’s estimated 30,000 employees will keep on working without Congress’s consent.
“It is ridiculous that a city of 632,000 people — a city where we have balanced our budget for 18 consecutive years and have a rainy-day fund of well over a billion dollars — cannot spend its residents’ own local tax dollars to provide them the services they’ve paid for without Congressional approval,” Gray continued.
“Congress can’t even get its own fiscal house in order; they should be taking lessons from us rather than imposing needless suffering on us. I will not allow the safety and well-being of District residents to be compromised by Congress’s dysfunction.”
D.C. Delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton sided with Gray, sharing her views in a statement published Sept. 25: “No member of Congress, myself included, should ever tell the District of Columbia what to do or how to spend its locally raised funds,” said Norton. “The District government is not a federal agency and should not be treated as such for any purpose, especially federal appropriations.”
District Council chairman Phil Mendelson and at-large councilmember David Grosso are both working to release D.C. from the Federal government’s jurisdiction. Mendelson is to bring forth his own bill on Oct. 1, which will further support the continuation of work within the city. Grosso suggests D.C. should expand upon this rebellion and begin ignoring a piece of the Home Rule Charter requiring 30 days of congressional review for D.C. legislation.
Not everyone is in harmony with Gray’s voicing for change. Former D.C. U.S. Attorney Joe DiGenova is among the opponents. DiGenova points out that Gray’s decision defies the Antideficiency Act, which prohibits federal employees from participating in spending greater than available funds, unless authorized by law. “If the city thinks that by violating this law it hopes to make its case for self-rule, this is idiocy of immense proportions,” DiGenova said.
D.C. Attorney General Irvin Nathan has warned that Gray’s decision could result in fines and jail time for D.C. government employees. “I would point out they have taken oath to uphold the law, and if you engage in civil disobedience you have to take the consequences and the victims of the consequences could as well be the District,” Nathan said.
It is uncertain if D.C. residents can expect continued access to recreational centers, libraries and trash collection if the federal government shuts down Monday. However, D.C. may be freed from similar federal government bullying come January 2014. At that time, the proposed D.C. budget autonomy will take effect, leaving D.C. liberated from “Congress’s dysfunction.”
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Our First President Finally Gets His Library at Mount Vernon
•
George Washington seems to many the inscrutable, difficult to know , the founding father built for a bust. Yet, at his home at Mount Vernon, Va., we have always come closer to him—he died here, he dined here, he worked his plantation and farm with diligence and care, living the life of love, family and mind after the wars and the heroic glories of being the first President of the United States of America.
We came closer still Sept. 27, when some 1,200 people, dignitaries, elected officials, trustees, intellectual worthies and members of the media gathered for the dedication of the Fred W. Smith National Library for the Study George Washington at Mount Vernon. After more than 200 years, our founding father was finally getting a resplendent, next-to-his-home presidential library, thanks to the generosity of major donors and the untiring efforts of the Mount Vernon Ladies’ Association.
David McCullough, the two-time Pulitzer Prize-winning American historian who has insisted and shown in all of his great works that history is about human beings, told a story about Gen. Washington at Trenton, N.J., In the last December days of 1776, as he rounded up his troops in formation and urged them to re-enlist for the princely sum of $10, which “was quite a bit of money in those days,” McCullough said. The general asked each man who was willing to re-enlist to step forward, “and then he started to trot away on his magnificent horse and turn around to see that not a single man had stepped forward.”
“Think of that moment when everything hung in the balance,” said McCullough, a spellbinder himself on a day when clouds ruled with occasional forays by sunlight. “So, he engaged the men again and appealed to something else.” The men, McCullough suggested, had above all an opportunity they would never have again anywhere else. This is what Washington said: “My brave fellows, you have done all I asked you to do, and more than can be reasonably expected, but your country is at stake, your wives, your houses and all that you hold dear. You have worn yourselves out with fatigues and hardships, but we know not how to spare you. If you will consent to stay one month longer, you will render that service to the cause of liberty, and to your country, which you probably can never do under any other circumstances.”
“I can’t help but think,” McCullough continued, “that Washington might have inspired by Shakespeare’s and Henry V’s St. Crispin’s Day speech before the battle of Agincourt, appealing to his men, to them as “we few, we happy few, we band of brothers.” “I don’t know that, but Washington, as we shall see, was a reader, a lover of books, he was influenced by the Enlightenment, he liked the theater and Shakespeare and the classics, this has the ring of that.”
Listening to McCullough, our much-honored and perhaps most excellent historian in an age of excellent historians and biographers like Kearns, Isaacson, Meacham, Caro and Morris, to name a few, you could not help but feel you were present at a special moment in time, as if Washington himself, human and tall, would be greeting us at the door, once the door to the library opened in a moment of fanfare and confetti.
We were not far from his home, close enough to imagine the flowing river, the dock, the rooms and dining hall and landscaped gardens, and close enough to hear the hum of Americans from all over America—and other visitors from farther afield in the world as they traveled the world of George Washington. We watched and listened even as the city not far from here was encased in the embrace of dysfunctional partisanship and absence of manners of the kind which Washington abhorred and warned against.
The two senators—both Democrats—from Virginia were there, Mark Warner and Tim Kaine, both former governors, too, as is the pattern in Virginia politics, and hastened to say, after praising the spirit and the reality of the man, that they must hasten off to participate in the Senate vote on the funding legislation which had been produced by the House of Representative, complete with a proviso to defund Obamacare, all of which was looking like a prelude to a government shutdown come midnight Monday.
Such thoughts seemed almost unseemly at this moment because this was the home of the man whose every breath, word, cough, bow or not, pronouncement and act as the first President of the United States was precedent-setting, a fact the stolid, often stoic Washington was completely aware of.
The library itself—centuries in the making but actually a matter of over two years in construction since the official groundbreaking in 2011—is a pleasing product, a tribute to the complicated man, his taste and an invitation, although we now know much about him, “to know more, we need to know more,” as McCullough said. It has the grandeur of old books, papers, volumes of writings, history made solid.
The completion and creation of the library was an unfulfilled wish on the part of Washington, as Mt. Vernon Regent Ann Bookout noted, quoting his own statement from 1797: “I have not houses to build, except one, which I must erect for the accommodation and security of my military, civil and private papers, which are voluminous and may be interesting.” They may indeed.
The library was created from funds of a capital campaign goal of more than $100 million for which the Donald W. Reynolds Foundation, of which Fred W. Smith has been the long-time chairman, contributed a lead gift of $38 million. Other significant contributions came from the DeVos Family Foundation, John and Adrienne Mars, David M. Rubenstein and Karen Wright.
Virginia governor Bob McDonnell spoke, and the musical powerhouse couple of Amy Grant and Vince Gill sang, “American the Beautiful” and the dignitaries, including founding director Douglas Bradburn set off the official opening of the doors with a curtain drop and red-white-and-blue confetti flying. Everyone descended on the library, giving it a fullness and buzzy business it will likely not see again. Libraries—full of books of yore as well as new with scholarship and scholars—are, after all, known for silences occasionally interrupted by receptions and speeches.
Here, it was mingle time at this library, three floors, at once giving off a modern, cool and clean vibe attached to a warm, welcoming quality by the pitch-perfect design of MFM Design of Bethesda, Md., headed by MFM President Richard Molinaroli, who said that the design “should not look so contemporary that it feels disconnected. …This is a contemporary building rooted in traditional forms of architecture…When you walk into the building you should get an immediate sense of George Washington.”
This is immediately evident in the Karen Buchwald Wright reading room, where sun sprayed glass, offering a view of grass-green and tree-rich grounds, gold and brown colors, desks and comfortable chairs are presided over by Houdon-like busts of Washington and his contemporaries, an array of all-stars that include Jefferson, Franklin, Hamilton, Madison and Adams. “Washington was a great leader because he could move and inspire other leaders to work together, that they were in it together, “ McCullough said. Or as a man of the times noted, that if they failed, they would hang together.
In this environment, the mingling was easy—you could go into the reading room and run into former governor and former senator George Allen and his wife Susan or peruse the rare book room with former House Speaker Newt Gingrich and his wife Callista and chat briefly with them about the Wagner offering at the Washington National Opera.
You walk through the library among the old books—“Don Quixote,” the poets, “The Illiad” and realize that Washington was an eclectic man willing to pursue his thoughts as they struck him. “He loved the theater,” McCullough, who is working on a book about the Wright Brothers, told us. “He must have seen Addison’s ‘Cato,’ a popular play of the time about the last and fiercest defender of the Roman Republic,” a play which is rarely, if ever, performed these days. Washington read Alexander Pope who advised, “Act well the part, there all the honor lies.”
And there, and here, it lies still.
“I didn’t know Hamilton was so handsome,” a woman was heard saying in the reading room, as she looked up at the busts looking at each other.
You imagine them some night, moonlit, when only guards remain somewhere in the building, imagine them having silent conversation, this band of founding brothers, breathing thoughts and memories here at the library.
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Frye Celebrates Georgetown Flagship With Opening Party
• October 7, 2013
The Frye Company held a grand opening party Oct. 2 for its Georgetown flagship store with a special performance by Mission South. Party-goers enjoyed the freshly renovated and unique historic structure, full of leather and Frye’s famed boots, along with drinks and heavy hors d’oeuvres.
Known for its boots, shoes, handbags and accessories, the Frye Company is the oldest continuously operating footwear company in the United States. The Georgetown store is its third U.S. location and opened for business a few weeks ago.
Near the C&O Canal at 1066 Wisconsin Ave., NW, the store occupies the former space of Papa-Razzi Restaurant. Frye’s 2,700-square-foot store is located in the historic Vigilant Firehouse, the oldest extant firehouse in D.C., which first housed Engine 5.
Founded in Massachusetts in 1863, Frye is celebrating its 150th anniversary with a collection of footwear of its most iconic styles — including a new flag theme. With its boots, worn by soldiers, sailors, singers and actors, the company has fans that have ranged from Sarah Jessica Parker to General George Patton to John Lennon.
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Georgetown BID to Host Final Georgetown 2028 Community Forum
•
Tonight will mark the Georgetown Business Improvement District’s final Community Engagement Meeting, regarding its 15-year strategic plan, Georgetown 2028. At tonight’s gathering, the BID will review the elements of a Georgetown 2028 draft it has put together over the past few months.
Georgetown 2028 is a collection and eventual implementation of community ideas with the goal of improving the appeal of Georgetown. The people of Georgetown are voicing questions or concerns about what they want to revamp or restore. Ideas mentioned in Georgetown 2028’s June 2013 community forum included walking path expansion and greater public transit accessibility. There was even talk of bringing a metro stop to Georgetown University’s main campus.
Since its launch in January 2013, Georgetown 2028 has been collecting more input and support. Its task force includes the Georgetown BID as well as Georgetown residents, merchants, community leaders, restaurateurs, office tenants, architects and more. These groups recognize that, in order for Georgetown to remain competitive as a thriving commercial district, certain changes need to take place.
More specifically, people have been contributing suggestions in the fields of transportation, physical space, the economy and the environment. The BID hopes that changes in these areas will resurrect Georgetown’s former glory as a primary shopping and dining sector.
The Georgetown community is invited to attend the forum hosted by Foley & Lardner LLP (3000 K St., NW Suite 600, Washington Harbour) tonight from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.
Doors open at 5:30 p.m. RSVP: georgetown2028@georgetowndc.com
Weekend Round UP October 3, 2013
•
Verdi Chamber Arias
October 4th, 2013 at 07:30 PM | $37 – $30 | teatroliricodc@aol.com | Tel: (202) 360-3514 | Event Website
Giuseppe Verdi was one of the most influential composers of Italian opera. Several of his operatic melodies, such as La donna è mobile, have transcended into popular culture. In the concert Verdi Chamber Arias, the artists explore Verdi’s intimate world as composer of chamber songs. Featuring Elisabeth Turchi (soprano), Jose Sacin (baritone) and Pablo Henrich-Lobo (tenor)on vocals,and oboist William Wielgus and pianist Michael Crabill.
Address
International Student House; 1825 R Street, NW . Washington, DC 20009
American University 10th Annual Public Anthropology Conference
October 5th, 2013 at 08:00 AM | Free | AUPublicanthro@gmail.com | Tel: 415-722-0905 | Event Website
Please join academics, activists, and community organizers as the American University Department of Anthropology celebrates the 10th Annual Public Anthropology Conference October 5 and 6. Dr. Faye Harrison of the University of Florida will be the featured keynote speaker, and the conference is free and open to all. For more information and registration, please visit: http://bit.ly/ZRH96j
Address
American University; Mary Graydon Center; 4400 Massachusetts Ave
Race For Every Child
October 5th, 2013 at 08:30 AM | berry@slfstrategies.com | Tel: 703-609-6643 | Event Website
The Race for Every Child is a fun way to support children and families throughout the Washington area. The event will help fund specialized medical care, research into childhood diseases, and important wellness and preventive services to keep all children healthy through supporting Children’s National Medical Center. The finish line is just the beginning, because your support will impact many children and families for years to come.
Join as an individual, a team captain, or a team member.
Address
Freedom Plaza, Pennsylvania Avenue and 13th Street, NW
Robert Talbott Trunk Show
October 5th, 2013 at 11:00 AM | shop@everardsclothing.com | Tel: 202-298-7464 | Event Website
Shop the new fall line up from Robert Talbott exclusively at Everard’s Clothing. Fittings for custom shirts and special orders will be conducted by specialist Mary Beth Walsh.
Address
1802 Wisconsin Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20007
The 5 Ws of Sustainable Agriculture and Eating
October 5th, 2013 at 10:30 AM | Free | information@arlingtonartscenter.org | Tel: 703-248-6800 | Event Website
For everyone interested in eating safer, healthier, and tastier food, Arcadia Foods executive director Pamela Hess will present “The 5 Ws of Sustainable Agriculture and Eating.” Her lecture will highlight the economic and social impact of eating local food while providing the basics of sustainable agriculture – what makes some produce safer than others, and how to find the best food to put on your table. Join us for her lecture with Q&A about sustainable food in an urban community.
Address
Arlington Arts Center; 3550 Wilson Blvd Arlington, VA 22201
Horton’s Kids 25th Anniversary Party Kick-Off: A Dedication to Founder Karin Walser
October 6th, 2013 at 01:00 PM | ahughes@deweysquare.com | Event Website
Twenty-five years ago, a young congressional staffer, Karin Walser, saw the plight of in-need children living around the Capitol and set out to make a difference in their lives by creating a safe space for the children of Ward 8 to learn, play, and grow. What started with weekend trips to the National Zoo has grown into a significant community organization that has helped thousands of children and families in the Wellington Park and Stanton Oaks communities receive tutoring services, enrichment programs, and nutritional meals for families.
Address
Horton’s Kids Community Resource Center; 2500 Pomeroy Rd SE,
Note: Dedicated press parking will be available.
Open Kitchen Bistro + Wine Bar Celebrates Anniversary with Slow Food Fundraiser
October 7th, 2013 at 05:00 PM | Tel: 703 942 8148 | Event Website
Open Kitchen celebrates their four-year anniversary by giving back to its community that has made it so popular and partnering with local non-profit Slow Food, DC chapter to bring The Ark of Taste Gardens to area public schools. , Open Kitchen Bistro + Wine bar will generously donate 50% of the night’s sales to support Slow Food DC’s The Ark of Taste Garden program.
The Ark of Taste promotes the forgotten flavors of rare and regional foods that make up our country’s diverse cultural and culinary heritage. The DC Chapter will use the money donated to plant gardens at local public schools to raise awareness in the Northern Virginia community.
Address
7115 Leesburg Pike; Falls Church, VA 22043
The Washington DCJCC Literary Festival, Man of Mystery: Walter Mosley
October 7th, 2013 at 07:30 AM | $18, Discounted $15, VIP $40 (priority signing and front-row seating) | litfest@washingtondcjcc.org | Tel: 202-777-3251 | Event Website
Bestselling author Walter Mosley burst onto the literary scene in 1990 with his first Easy Rawlins mystery, Devil in a Blue Dress. His latest, Little Green, the 12th book in the Easy Rawlins series, is an engrossing and atmospheric mystery. Mosley brings his signature grit and panache to this tough-minded exploration of good and evil and the power of guilt and redemption.
Address
DCJCC, 1529 16th Street, NW, Washington, DC 20036
Shutdown’s Little Details Say a Lot: Towpath, Parks Closed
• October 3, 2013
Now we know how Cinderella felt—that is, before she put her foot in the right shoe.
When the clock struck midnight, we the people pretty much turned into pumpkins. The much dreaded, much-warned-about, much afeared, much debated U.S. government shutdown had occurred. After three attempts by the House of Representatives to get the Senate to accept three different attempts to do something , almost anything bad to Obamacare while also keeping the government open meant to create a budget agreement and avert a shutdown, the government did indeed shut down, although not totally, and hopefully, not for long and certainly not permanently. The Senate rejected—as promised—any budget agreement involving Obamacare.
Some early bicycle riders were off to work who knows where, the furloughed federals perhaps asleep in their beds, as well as the baby panda, although we could not be sure, the Panda cam having no one to monitor it, being part of the furloughed workers at the Smithsonian National Zoo, including many of its (and the country’s) national parks and museum. There was no tumult and shouting on the block.
There was in the Washington Post—”SHUTDOWN,” the front page screamed—”Congress stuck in funding stalemate.”
By dawn’s early light, a city full of disappointed tourists and workers. The other side, plus a rundown on the fate of federal agencies, federal workers—some 700,000 furloughed nationally, local impact (you know the drill) and key dates, all inside. None of which quite matched the pungency and awful impact of the New York Daily News front page with a photo illustration of House Speaker John Boehner—who did not have his finest hour(s) during the political wars leading up to the shutdown—sitting at the Lincoln Memorial with the headline: “HOUSE OF TURDS.”
Be all that as it may, the shutdown—which will be even more partial with the planned legislation to restore help for veterans and keeping bigger national parks (but not the Panda cam and zoo and museums) open—will haves its impact locally. The longer it goes on, the bigger the impact on the local tourist industry in the city, not to mention the absence of furloughed workers, costs that some predict to be in the hundreds of millions on a daily basis. It should be remembered that the last major government shutdown over which President Bill Clinton and House Speaker Newt Gingrich sparred and presided last three weeks.
The city will continue to function and operate, as promised by Mayor Vincent Gray, who has declared city workers as essential, defying federal rules. Gray promised to go to jail rather than relent. That means trash will be picked up and other city services will continue to be provided. On the bright side, it will feel like a weekend without tourists, or park rangers, which is to say only modestly crowded. You might even find a legal parking space. But illegal spaces will still be ticketed.
Another thing that did happen: Ford Theater’s planned opening night for “The Laramie Project”, the high-profile play about the murder of a gay man in Wyoming and its aftermath, had to be moved to the rehearsal space of the downtown Woolly Mammoth Theatre, a mostly-for-press opening because theater officials were informed today that all-stage productions in the building would not be allowed to continue until the shutdown ends, because the theater is funded partially by the federal agency.
While the big news of the federal government shutdown Oct. 1 is that non-essential government workers stay home, the shutdown also affects the minor things of everyday living: like going to the theater, jogging along the towpath in Georgetown or visiting the Jefferson Memorial.
While most essential federal services continue, such as the military, police, fire, U.S. mail, schools, Social Security and disability benefits, food stamps, planes and trains, Metrobus and Metrorail, tickets from speed cameras.
What is closed? The U.S. Capitol except for members, Smithsonian buildings (hope you did not have a party planned there today or tomorrow) and all national parks across America. No National Gallery of Art, no National Zoo. No applications for Social Security and several other programs.
You see, Ford’s Theatre is closed because it is part of the National Park Service as is the C&O Canal National Park which runs through Georgetown near the Potomac. And so is Georgetown Waterfront Park, where the fountain is turned off at Wisconsin Avenue and K, that intersection named Charles Percy Plaza. (Sen. Percy from Illinois would be most disappointed at his Republican Party.)
Even the nearby Kennedy Center, part private and public, has cancelled tours but continues its performances along with the box office, restaurants, parking being open. It opens at 5 p.m. but stated: “Due to the government shutdown, the Kennedy Center’s public hours will be curtailed. However, all performances will go on as scheduled and the Box Office, the Gift Shops, the Roof Terrace Restaurant, KC Café, parking, and the Metro shuttle will be operating. Building tours will not be available.”
There is not much space to launch a canoe. Along with others, the Key Bridge Boathouse is closed, as access to the Potomac River along Georgetown is National Park Service land.
An email from Mike Nardolilli, president of the C&O Canal Trust, had this news alert:
“As you may be aware, our Federal Government has shut down for an indeterminate amount of time. What you may not have realized, however, is that the closure of the Federal Government means the closure of the C&O Canal National Historical Park and all other National Parks. For the C&O Canal, this means:
THE TOWPATH IS CLOSED
• Visitor traffic, whether on foot, bike, or horse, is strictly prohibited.
• Bicyclists planning rides from Pittsburgh to DC on the GAP and C&O Canal should plan to turn back at Cumberland.
• All Visitors Centers are CLOSED.
• Hiker/Bikers and campgrounds are CLOSED.
• The Canal Quarters lockhouses are CLOSED.
• All restroom facilities, both permanent and portable, are CLOSED.
• Handles have been removed from all well pumps.
• The only Park staff that will be on duty will be law enforcement rangers.
• The portion of the Capital Crescent Trail that runs parallel to the towpath in DC is managed by the C&O Canal NHP and is CLOSED.
• All access roads to the Park are CLOSED. This means you will not be able to trailer boats to boat ramps along the towpath.
• Interpretive and educational programming in the Park will be temporarily suspended. School field trips to the Park will need to be rescheduled once Park staff has returned.
• Volunteer events and events requiring special use permits will not be able to take place.
• All volunteers working in an official capacity should cease volunteer activities immediately and not enter the Park’s premises.
After working side-by-side with the wonderful staff of the C&O Canal NHP for many years, it’s heartbreaking for the Trust to see them closing the doors, given no choice but to turn away thousands upon thousands of visitors seeking to recreate and rejuvenate along the canal’s towpath.
While the Park staff has no choice but to stand idly by, we as civilians can take action:
• Educate yourself and others on how the shutdown affects National Parks.
• Be vocal on social media and use #KeepParksOpen.
• Use any means of communication you can – letter, email, phone call, social media, or even a carrier pigeon – to appeal to Congress. Find your US Representatives and Senators on the National Park’s Conservation Association’s Legislative Lookup.
• Send notes of encouragement to the Park staff through our Facebook, Twitter, and email. To say this is a rough time for them is an understatement. We’ll forward your notes on and post them on social media, letting our Park Rangers know how much we appreciate them and are anxiously awaiting their return.
• Last but certainly not least, respect the closure. While we don’t like it one bit, we have to respect it. Disregarding the closure can create potentially unsafe and hazardous situations, damage Park resources, and create undue work and stress on the few staff left standing.”
[gallery ids="101478,152443,152440" nav="thumbs"]Navy Yard Shootings Makes D.C. Like the Others
• October 2, 2013
Newtown, Connecticut. Aurora, Colorado. Oak Creek, Wisconsin. Seattle, Washington. Oakland, California. Carson City, Nevada. Tucson, Arizona. Binghamton, New York. Fort Hood, Texas.
Add another name to that list. The District of Columbia.
This morning, Washington, D.C., became another name on a list of mass, multiple shootings which have sent cities, even one as security-conscious as the capital of the United States, into a nerve-wracked, chaotic emotional and media-state after the suspected shooter—identified as Aaron Alexis, 34, of Fort Worth, Texas—entered the Naval Sea Systems Command Headquarters building at the historic Navy Yard near Nationals Park and allegedly killed at least 12 persons. Alexis is also known to have been killed.
The scene shown on television—press conferences, people walking outside of the area, television and print reporters descending on the area, tense officials announcing the latest information on the number of dead—looked both like scenes from another country and another place and familiar.
The other shootings over the past 15 years took place in restaurants, community centers, a movie theater, an elementary school, a coffee shop, a church, a military installations. All played out to the sound of rapidly fired gunshots, sounds that have not yet reached the level of being commonplace.
Mayor Vincent Gray, Metropolitan Police Chief Cathy Lanier and other local law enforcement officials, including those of the U.S. Park Police and the FBI, and hospital officials gave out scattered bits of news to what remains a shocking event. No one could clearly remember anything quite like this. There have been attempted bombings, or shootings here, and there was a disastrous 1982 plane crash over the waters of the Potomac and the takeover of the Islamic Center and going back to the 1940s, the shootings in Congress by Puerto Rican militants.
President Barack Obama said: “We’re confronting yet another mass shooting and today it happened on a military installation in our nation’s capital. … These are men and women who were going to work doing their jobs and protecting all of us. They’re patriots. They know the the dangers of serving abroad, but today they faced the unimaginable violence that they wouldn’t have expected here at home.”
“I am deeply saddened by today’s senseless act of violence, which is the deadliest single incident in the District in more than three decades,” Gray said. “I want to express my deepest sympathies to the families of those whose lives were lost, and my thoughts and prayers are with those who suffered injuries – and particularly our first responders, who reacted to this incident with unflinching and unstinting bravery.”
Secretary of the Navy Ray Mabus called the shootings “a horrific attack” and “stunning blow” against the U.S. Navy.
In a heartfelt response to the crime and her caring for the wounded at the Washington Navy Yard, MedStar Washington Hospital Center Chief Medical Officer Janis Orlowski said, “There’s something evil in our society that we as Americans have to work to try to eradicate. … I would like you to put my trauma center out of business. I really would. I would like to not be an expert on gunshots. … Let’s get rid of this. This is not America.”
But something like this is a scene where confusion reigns amid the fog of blogs—wrong information merges with facts, a kind of information chaos is created. No one yet at this writing has mentioned motive in the case of Alexis, who was identified as a civilian navy contract who may have gained entry to what is considered one of the most secure buildings of the District of Columbia with an ID not his own.
Police have secured the area. The wounded are at the hospital. Workers at the Navy Yard have left the shut-down buildings. Flags are already at half-staff, the school lockdowns ended, traffic at M Street, SE, detoured and events postponed, including tonight’s Nationals-Braves game and music concert at the White House.
Those dozen killed we will soon learn of — and their families’ grief we may hardly know. So, how will we feel — and deal with such tragedies — tomorrow?
McCourt’s $100-Million Gift to Georgetown Creates New School
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Georgetown alumnus and former Los Angeles Dodger owner Frank McCourt, Jr., will donate $100 million to Georgetown University to establish a school of public policy. It is the single largest gift ever to the university. In October, the McCourt School of Public Policy will become Georgetown’s ninth school and its first new one since 1957.
McCourt, a real estate developer, earned a bachelor’s degree of economics in 1975. His father and two of his brothers and a son also attended Georgetown University. McCourt was last in the news 2012, when the Dodgers were sold for a little more than $2 billion, and was criticized by Major League Baseball for his management of the team.
“The McCourt School for Public Policy will leverage Georgetown’s location in Washington, D.C., its relationships with global leaders and its legacy of public service to launch a new approach to public policy,” according to a university spokesperson. “The McCourt School will contribute policy-based, data-driven research and solutions to the urgent policy issues of our time. This world-class research institution will incorporate the Georgetown Public Policy Institute, a nationally ranked graduate program.”
“Georgetown is uniquely positioned, at this moment in our university’s history, to build on our existing strengths as we grow to meet the needs of the complex and evolving public policy field,” said Georgetown University President John DeGioia. “The McCourt School of Public Policy will build on the foundation we have created while leveraging our most valuable resources – our location in the nation’s capital, our national and global reputation and our commitment to civil and civic discourse and engagement – to become the premiere academic resource for public policy in the 21st century.”
“There has never been a more urgent need for this work,” McCourt added in the university announcement of the gift. “The issues facing global leaders are more acute, dynamic and interrelated than ever before. We recognize an opportunity here to serve the world in a new way through an innovative approach to public policy research and analysis.”
According to the university, the McCourt School will also house a new Massive Data Institute, “which will harness and navigate the data that new advances in technology and communications have generated in the past decade. The Massive Data Institute will take an innovative approach to shaping public policy by training the next generation of leaders to critically analyze, extract and use these large sets of data to better inform public policy.”
“The generosity and partnership of Frank McCourt brings to life our vision to connect the Jesuit values of service and justice with a critical need in the 21st century for scholars, leaders, policymakers and organizations to work together in new ways,” DeGioia said. “Understanding the data now available to us and using it in the creation of public policy will be fundamental to shaping the public policy of the future.”
“The McCourt family has had a long relationship with Georgetown over multiple generations, and we are very pleased to partner with the university to bring to life the bold vision of a new public policy school,” McCourt added. “Georgetown’s unmatched interconnections with the people, institutions and ideas that shape global public policy make it uniquely qualified to develop the preeminent public policy school for our time.”
The university will officially launch the McCourt School for Public Policy at an academic ceremony Oct. 8 and will host an Oct. 9 event with members of the national and international policy communities, dignitaries and congressional leaders.
Council Fails to Override Veto on “Walmart Bill”; Votes to Censure Marion Barry
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It was a busy and, at times, noisy day for the District of Columbia City Council, but in the end it made two significant (if controversial) decisions.
The council could not find enough votes to override Mayor Vincent Gray’s veto of the Council’s proposed Large Retailer Accountability Act—known everywhere now as the “Walmart bill”—which would have brought about a so-called “living wage” requirement for of $12.50 an hour (or less, with benefits) to large, non-unionized retailers opening in the District. The bill was aimed at future and current retailers with corporate sales of $1 billion or higher with stores of at least 75,000 square feet.
The debate had been raging off and on all summer, since it came to be associated with the future and fortunes of Walmart stores, which are open shops and which in many instances pay non-living wages to employees. When the council passed the legislation, Walmart, which had been slated to open several stores in the District of Columbia, threatened to pull out of development of all area stores, including a highly touted one in Ward 7.
The issue for the council members who proposed the legislation, like City Council Chairman Phil Mendelson, was that it would lead to more under-paying jobs in the District. Mayor Gray in his veto said the bill was a “job-killer.” In effect, the debate often became frame in terms of “no jobs” or “low paying jobs” or “living wage jobs.” Organized labor, already in retreat in many parts of the country where similar issues are being debated, supported the bill forcing many council members into hard decisions. Opposing the measure were two city council members who had already announced they would be running for mayor: Muriel Bowser (Ward 4) and Tommy Wells (Ward 6), whose opposition was active and vocal, and included a proposal to raise the District’s minimum wage based on inflation numbers. Ward 2 Councilman Jack Evans, who has also declared his mayoral candidacy, voted for the legislation. New member Anita Bonds changed her vote from supporting the bill to opposing it, saying there were issues of fairness.
The council needed nine votes to override the veto. They got only seven. About 100 supporters of the bill had gathered outside the Wilson building to express their support of the Council bill.
Later in the day, a council — increasingly aware and worried of its past ethical problems and lack of support on that front from the general public — voted 9-4 to censure Ward 8 Councilman Marion Barry and to strip him of his Chairmanship of the Committee on Workforce and Community Development for taking gifts from DC construction companies in two instances totaling over $6,000. THe council disciplinary panel was led by Ward 5 council member Kenyan R. McDuffie. Barry had admitted the charges and took a $13,600 fine from the Board of Ethics and Government Accountability.
It is the second time in three years that Barry has been censured, in addition to having longstanding tax problems and being convicted in 1990 of cocaine possession charges (during his mayoral appointment) in the wake of a sensational trial which landed him in jail.
Council members seemed cognizant of Barry’s often reported legal troubles, the ongoing cloud that still seems to hang over the Mayor’s election campaign, and the fact that three high profile council members—Harry Thomas Jr, former City Council Chairman Kwame Brown and Michael Brown—have pleaded guilty to federal corruption charges.
