Fb 02 03 2016

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The Foggy BoTTom CurrenT

Wednesday, February 3, 2016

Vol. X, No. 9

Serving Foggy Bottom & the West End

Dems see three-way race for at-large

DAY AT THE OPERA

■ Politics: Gray said to plan

bid in Ward 7, not citywide By CUNEYT DIL

Current Correspondent

In a departure from many previous at-large D.C. Council races, this year’s Democratic field has remained narrow, with the two opponents challenging incumbent Vincent Orange promising a com-

petitive contest. David Garber, a former Navy Yard advisory neighborhood commissioner, filed to run in August. Joining the pack in December was 2014 at-large candidate Robert White, who most recently was director of community outreach for D.C. Attorney General Karl Racine. The latest fundraising totals available from the Office of Campaign Finance Monday show Orange with a war chest of

$145,479 on hand, while White and Garber each have roughly $50,000 cash remaining after expenditures. With the March 16 deadline approaching for candidates to file for the primary, the city is also waiting to see what former Mayor Vincent Gray decides to do. After federal investigators dropped the nearly five-year-long investigation into his 2010 mayoral camSee Council/Page 14

Arrests yield call for Wilson safety focus By MARK LIEBERMAN Current Staff Writer

Brian Kapur/The Current

Georgetown University’s weekly Friday Music Series featured members of the Washington National Opera Domingo-Cafritz Young Artists Program performing arias and duets from popular operas at McNeir Hall.

Wilson High School students have been generating a lot of headlines lately — but not for the reasons the community might want. Just last week, six Wilson students — five male and one female — were arrested in the Woodley Park Metro station after allegedly punching a fellow rider at the Gallery Place-Chinatown station. Around 30 minors were kicked out of the Metro at Woodley Park, according to media reports. This incident comes a little more than a week after another Metro-related crime on Jan. 20, when a Wilson student was stabbed outside the Tenleytown station shortly after school let out. Wilson also made headlines in December, when a student brought a semiautomatic handgun into the school. The events have inspired a range of responses from community members. Some believe the high

Brian Kapur/Current file photo

Some parents and community leaders say Wilson High’s administrators should do more to address students’ off-campus behavior.

school should be held responsible for its students’ behavior even outside of its halls. Others caution that the incidents represent a small fraction of the Wilson population. See Wilson/Page 15

Chaplain seeks to move chapel at Walter Reed

ANC calls for heating plant redevelopment to be less tall

By MARK LIEBERMAN

■ Georgetown: Commission park. They’re hoping to tear down

building and an adjacent public

Current Staff Writer

Jeff Clemens spent almost half a year recovering from a life-threatening illness at the Walter Reed Army Medical Center. He spent much of his free time regaining his physical and emotional strength in the campus’s historic chapel. “It spoke to my heart, it healed my body and answered my spirit,” Clemens said. Now Clemens, a longtime Army chaplain who returned from the war in Afghanistan in 2011, wants to see the 1931 building remain a functioning house of worship for future generations of military members. And now that the Walter Reed campus has been closed and slated for redevelopment — with the area around the chapel being turned over to the State

also has questions about raze

By BRADY HOLT Brian Kapur/The Current

Despite requests to move the 1931 chapel to Virginia, officials say preservation rules mean it will likely stay in place at the former Army campus.

Department for a complex of embassies — Clemens wants the chapel to be relocated. His dream is for it to join the D-Day Memorial in Bedford, Va., in time to coincide with the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I in November 2018. But he’ll face significant legal hurdles in his purSee Chapel/Page 4

Current Staff Writer

The planned West Heating Plant redevelopment is facing lingering concerns over demolition of a building within the Georgetown Historic District and the scale of its replacement. The Levy Group and the Georgetown Co. are hoping to convert the vacant industrial complex at 29th and K streets NW into a new 10-story luxury condo

the monolithic heating plant and replace it with a similarly shaped but slightly smaller building with monumental architecture designed to fit in with the Kennedy Center and the Lincoln Memorial. At Monday’s meeting of Advisory Neighborhood Commission 2E (Georgetown, Burleith), most comments about the plans were favorable. The current heating plant building seems to have few fans aside from ardent preservationists, and developers say its structure has deteriorated. Many See Plant/Page 15

NEWS

EVENTS

BUSINESS

INDEX

Renovation advances

‘Conversation’ starter

Meat-light Beefsteak

Calendar/20 Classifieds/29 District Digest/5 Exhibits/21 Foggy Bottom News/11 In Your Neighborhood/18

Contentious overhaul of Friendship Rec Center set for completion this fall / Page 2

Arena Stage welcomes D.C. premiere of political drama about Georgetown hostess / Page 23

Veggie-focused eatery set to add Tenley location to join Dupont Circle, Foggy Bottom sites / Page 3

Opinion/8 Police Report/6 Real Estate/17 School Dispatches/16 Service Directory/27 Week Ahead/3

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