Serving Foggy Bottom & the West End
Wednesday, September 9, 2015
INS
IDE
Vol. IX, No. 40
The Foggy BoTTom CurrenT
Shorts festival showcases local artists
■ Turnover: Carnes resigns
as student pursues Sacco’s seat
Current Staff Writer
By MARK LIEBERMAN Current Staff Writer
Big changes are coming to the Foggy Bottom/West End advisory neighborhood commission, with George Washington University sophomore Eve Zhurbinskiy preparing to take over a vacant slot and a commissioner of nearly three years departing. Jackson Carnes, who started serving on the commission in 2012, announced last Thursday that he’s
Brian Kapur/The Current
The Kennedy Center is hosting various performances and open skate sessions as part of its 10-day festival, “Finding a Line: Skateboarding, Music, and Media.” The event celebrates the creative ties and improvisational elements shared between skateboarding and live music.
By MARK LIEBERMAN Current Staff Writer
EVENTS
— Page 7
UN
ITY
GU
IDE
resigning from his seat in order to focus on his duties as director of constituent services for Ward 4 D.C. Council member Brandon Todd. Meanwhile, after former commissioner Peter Sacco graduated from George Washington in May and vacated his position, the search has been underway for his replacement. Zhurbinskiy reached out to Sacco, who now serves as executive director for the commission, and they planned to start a formal campaign when she returned from summer vacation. Now, the native of Scotch Plains, N.J., has submitted the required 20 See Turnover/Page 35
Photo courtesy of Susan Orlins
Susan Orlins and Gerald Anderson near the Gallery Place Metro stop Wesley Heights resident Orlins, a published author and former journalist who had just started working at the Street Sense nonprofit as a volunteer editor when Anderson came into her life.
Exorcist Steps just one of several D.C. landmarks in films — Page CG4
■ Public safety: Attorney
general negotiates agreement By DEIRDRE BANNON Current Correspondent
Anderson, now 48, grew up in poverty in New Orleans. He dropped out of seventh grade and landed in juvenile detention for stealing small items with his brother by the age of 15. He spent almost all of the next two decades bouncing from prison to prison, even overlapping with his imprisoned father when he was 25. When he finally emerged from prison for good three weeks before Hurricane Katrina laid waste to his hometown, Anderson had nowhere but there to settle. As devastating as the storm was, it provided him with a new sense of purpose. He spent much of the hurricane and its aftermath in rescue mode, focusing on the most helpless individuals: a See Homeless/Page 5
COMMUNITY GUIDE
Art exhibition at GU gallery simulates decayed cityscapes
MM
Synthetic drug bust brings Petworth store’s departure
Katrina survivor shares his story in new book When Gerald Anderson first met Susan Orlins in October 2013, he was working as a Street Sense vendor selling newspapers next to the Gallery Place Metro station. A year and a half later, you’ll still find Anderson selling papers outside the station, but now he’s a different man. Back then, he was homeless and addicted to cocaine. Now he’s a local celebrity who hasn’t touched drugs in more than a year and just published his first book, “Still Standing: How an Ex-Con Found Salvation in the Floodwaters of Katrina.” The transformation occurred as a result of Anderson’s friendship with
CO
In Foggy Bottom, ANC sees multiple departures
BIG AIR
By MARK LIEBERMAN Cory Wilson’s D.C.-based production company, the Collaborative, was looking to tackle a fun project separate from its business goals of advocacy and advertising. On a whim, the Eastern Market resident asked his friend Frankie Abralind — a writer who spends some afternoons sitting on the National Mall crafting poems for anyone who passes by and talks to him — if he’d be interested in being the subject of a short documentary. One day of shooting later, the short film “Sitting on the Mall” was born. Some films that classify as “shorts” take even less time to create, with their brief shoots and tight editing sessions. Aaron Fisher shot his short documentary “Christylez Bacon” in under two hours. It was conceived as a promotional video featuring the D.C.-based rapper of the film’s title, who was in the process of collaborating on a stage project at the Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company. Later, Fisher See Films/Page 3
:
Riyad Market in Petworth will vacate its storefront by Nov. 13, after reaching an agreement with the D.C. Office of the Attorney General in the wake of a synthetic drug bust last fall in which police seized 500 packets of the illegal substance. The agreement to vacate avoided an eviction trial that had been scheduled for Aug. 28 for the 800 Upshur St. market. “This is a big victory especially for this neighborhood and the 800 block of Upshur Street,” said assistant attorney general Michael Aniton, who’s been heading up the office’s efforts to crack down on synthetic drug sales. “It’s really been developing recently, and Riyad Market was hindering that progress because of certain activities taking place there — it was a negative mark on the block.” The eviction case was set to go before a judge, but ongoing negotiations among the Attorney General’s
SHERWOOD
Holiday weekend brings new visibility to ‘security theater’ — Page 4
Brian Kapur/The Current
Riyard Market will vacate its storefront by mid-November under the terms of an agreement to end eviction proceedings.
Office, the property owner’s attorney who initiated the eviction notice, and the business owners were successful in coming to an agreement to vacate. If Riyad Market fails to leave the property by Nov. 13, the property owner could file to force an eviction and a judge could notify the U.S. Marshal’s Office to remove the business. The District has seen a spike in synthetic drug use recently that the mayor and police chief have called an epidemic. In June, there were 439 See Market/Page 35
INDEX Calendar/6 Classifieds/38 District Digest/2 Exhibits/7 Foggy Bottom News/9
In Your Neighborhood/34 Opinion/4 Real Estate/33 Service Directory/36 Week Ahead/3
Tips or comments? Contact us at newsdesk@currentnewspapers.com