The Georgetown Current
Wednesday, January 27, 2016
Hours in flux for permit at old Post site
City, Georgetown BID join to repair sidewalks
booking it
12 for a shared initiative that will
■ Transportation: Effort will bring sidewalk repairs more fre-
facilitate quicker brick repairs
By MARK LIEBERMAN Current Staff Writer
Residents who live near the former Washington Post complex got a brief promise of respite last week from the planned 24-hour demolition of the buildings — only to have it ripped away a day later, as the Office of Administrative Hearings reversed course and allowed the work permit to continue. A final ruling on the case will come from the office after a Friday hearing. For now, the latest decision allows around-the-clock construction to proceed at the complex at 15th and L streets NW, after the office ultimately reversed a decision to grant a motion to suspend the work permit. Arguing his case at Friday’s hearing will be Mike Fasano, who lives nearby in the Presidential Cooperative. He believes the permit for overnight work was issued illegally and that the D.C. Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs should have sought feedback from the community before See Demolition/Page 5
By MARK LIEBERMAN Current Staff Writer
More than a million bricks lie within the Georgetown commercial district. Many of them are prone to weathering and breaks caused by delivery trucks and foot traffic. Repairs have been sporadic — but that’s due to change soon. The Georgetown Business Improvement District and the D.C. Department of Transportation reached an agreement on Jan.
quently and more efficiently: The business group will carry out repairs as needed, and the Transportation Department will pay for the work. “DDOT’s really good at managing large contracts, and the BID is really good at doing small jobs,” business district president and CEO Joe Sternlieb told The Current. “This is a partnership to use the resources of the BID to get things done more quickly and more efficiently.” The project was born in 2014, See Sidewalks/Page 13
Local businesses brush off blizzard to serve neighbors By MARK LIEBERMAN
Brian Kapur/The Current
Current Staff Writer
After more than a foot of snow blanketed the District, local residents took to area parks to enjoy sledding, snowball fights and snowman building. In Georgetown, residents took to Book Hill Park for their fill of winter games.
Tenley ANC seeks traffic safety upgrades By CUNEYT DIL
Current Correspondent
Tenleytown community leaders are calling on the city to make a number of traffic safety improvements along Wisconsin Avenue NW and in the area near Deal Middle School and Wilson High School. On a stretch of Chesapeake Street NW where students from both schools regularly cross, Advisory Neighborhood Commission 3E (Tenleytown, Friendship Heights) wants the city to consider creating a three-way stop at the intersection of 40th Street. The commission is also requesting a stop sign at 41st and Chesapeake streets going northbound and a
Vol. XXV, No. 26
Serving Burleith, Foxhall, Georgetown, Georgetown Reservoir & Glover Park
Brian Kapur/The Current
The commission is worried about pedestrian safety at several sites near Deal Middle School.
raised crosswalk at Chesapeake Street and Belt Road, among other tweaks. Meanwhile, ANC 3E also passed a lengthy list of recommen-
dations targeting curb cuts and other issues along Wisconsin Avenue, from Van Ness Street NW north to the Maryland line. The commission’s resolution, directed at the D.C. Department of Transportation, lists dozens of addresses that have curb cuts or driveways that either don’t comply with city regulations or often draw cars to park on public space. The city’s practice has been to grandfather existing curb cuts that are too close to an intersection or to each other, as well as parking spaces that are on the public space between the street and property line, even though these practices are no longer allowed. Commissioners said the addresses they See Safety/Page 10
Justin Anderson’s tiny basement apartment in Tenleytown was filled with four of his colleagues on Friday night. One person slept on a futon, another on a couch. Two more rested on air mattresses. “It’s not the biggest in the world, but we make it work,” ■ SERVING said Anderson, THE NEEDY: manager of Nonprofits gave Osman & Joe’s out extra food, Steak ’n Egg clothes before Kitchen at 4700 storm. Page 2. Wisconsin Ave. NW, which promises 24-hour service in all kinds of weather. Steak ’n Egg was one of numerous local businesses that kept their doors open during the weekend blizzard that blanketed the city under 18 to 24 inches of snow. Anderson’s colleagues stayed with him overnight so they could make the mile trek to the restaurant for work. The tight squeeze paid off, Anderson said — as of early Saturday afternoon, during the height of the snowfall, between 40 and
Brian Kapur/The Current
Georgetown’s Via Umbria stayed open during the blizzard, with several employees staying at the nearby Georgetown Inn.
80 paying customers had already come in, ranging from snowplow operators to the usual types of passerby. Even the looming threat of a power outage (which never materialized) didn’t faze Anderson, who noted that the grill and other appliances don’t require electricity. The restaurant has built a reputation in the community for reliable, consistent service, and Anderson wasn’t willing to let a snowstorm ruin that. “As long as we can see, we can work,” Anderson said. The story was similar at Glen’s Garden Market at 2001 S St. NW See Storm/Page 5
BUSINESS
SPORTS
SHERWOOD
INDEX
Nutritional treatment
Cathedral diver wins
Weather-weary
Calendar/14 Classifieds/21 District Digest/4 Exhibits/15 In Your Neighborhood/12 Opinion/6
New Friendship Heights clinic looks to plant-based diet as part of path to recovery / Page 3
Freshman stands out at ISL diving championship, benefiting from prior gymastics work / Page 9
Spring is in sight, but still far from today’s streets as cleanup efforts drag on / Page 6
Police Report/8 Real Estate/11 School Dispatches/18 Service Directory/19 Sports/9 Week Ahead/3
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