Sent: Thursday, April 7, 2016 8:14 PM
To: undisclosed-recipients:
Subject: PRESS RELEASE: Chairman Mendelson Shocks with Request for Emergency Legislation for McMillan Opponents React Swiftly and Strongly
Save McMillan Action Coalition (SMAC)
For
Release: April 7,
2016
Contact: Chris Otten, 1-202-810-2768, smac.dc@gmail.com, https://www.facebook.com/SAVEMcMillan, www.savemcmillan.org/opposition, @dc4reality
Chairman Mendelson Shocks with Request for Emergency Legislation for McMillan
Opponents React Swiftly and Strongly
This past
Monday, April 4th, DC Council Chairman, Phil Mendelson introduced emergency legislation, without a
clear reason, that would waive the requirement for competitive bidding - as
mandated in the Procurement Practices Reform Act of 2010 - specifically for the
Vision McMillan Partners’ (VMP) proposed mixed-use development project at the
McMillan Sand Filtration Site that is located in Ward 5 and at the southwest
corner of the intersection of Michigan Avenue and North Capitol St NW.
The
reactions from opponents of the proposed development were swift and strong.
More than one hundred DC residents sent in letters of protest in less than 24
hours to the Chairman and city council members to make known their disgust.
“As a DC
resident and mother of three young kids that lives just three blocks south of
McMillan Park who will be directly impacted by whatever happens up there, and
has worked hard with the Friends of McMillan Park [FOMP] and SMAC to help the
council understand why the VMP project is so very unwanted by neighbors
and admirers of the historic site with its fascinating underground caverns, I
am furious with Mendelson,” says Erin Fairbanks, of Bloomingdale.
“Apparently,
an unbiased survey of the surrounding communities completed in 2012 by
neighbors to understand the desires of fellow neighbors that concluded that the
majority wanted more than 75% of the site serving as park and the caverns
preserved, is inconsequential to the council. It is also meaningless that
opponents have gathered in excess of 8,000 signatures asking the City to stop
the VMP project and to rethink what is to go there. I, and thousands of others
have, essentially, been told that our voices are being ignored. He has deceived
us and we have been disenfranchised by him in favor of the constituents he and
our council members would prefer to represent - the developers.”
The highly
unusual measure, which the Chairman won approval by the Council on Tuesday,
removes control and transparency of the McMillan project from the DC government
and gives it to the McMillan private development team -- cementing the fact
that District taxpayers will pay most, if-not-all up front development costs in
this deal.
Further, it
completely ignores the concerns outlined by DC Auditor Kathy Patterson in her 2015 review of the project and her
recommendation that the city have the project competitively re-bid. On
Monday, Patterson re-affirmed her position on the
McMillan deal before the vote and warned that it is, “... a serious matter to
spend taxpayer dollars without competition… .”
DC Ward 2
resident Carole Lewis Anderson wrote to the Chairman in reaction to his bill,
“You have ridiculed our efforts to preserve the historic site for redevelopment
by and for the people. You have suggested that the progress of VMP through the
District Government system of hoops and approvals is our fault for not having
caused others — perhaps poorer residents who have to work and have no excess
funds to contribute to our totally volunteer efforts — to ply the halls in huge
numbers. You have told us that facts and data which we have spent our own
dollars and hours to identify were false. You have invited us to work with your
staff as we uncovered information, in effect doing your work for you, even as
you undertook tools of legislative “flexibility” to stop our progress.”
Opponents
to the Chairman’s bill attended Wednesday’s budget hearing for the Deputy
Mayor’s Office for Planning and Economic Development (DMPED) and reacted with
pointed testimony.
Deb
Hanrahan, a DC resident in Ward 5 for fifty years, told the Chairman that DMPED
is engaging in reckless behavior, and called Mendelson’s emergency legislation
a “little charade...that would retroactively legalize DMPED's illegal action of
failing to follow the city's competitive bidding process on the McMillan
development -- a failing that was the focus of the city auditor's report last
summer.” She continued in pointing out that he “made the amazing statement that
it was the intention all along NOT to have competitive bidding on this project.
I say amazing, because this is the first time you or DMPED or any advocate for
this project has ever claimed this publicly. Your argument has always been that
we opponents of the VMP project were wrong in our interpretation of what had
occurred in the bidding process. Yet, as the city auditor's report showed -- we
were right.”
The Save
McMillan Action Coalition encourages DC residents who are outraged by Chairman
Mendelson and this council’s legislation on McMillan to send in
letters, call, and get involved with SMAC to prepare a
protest. Contact SMAC at: smac.dc@gmail.com.
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