Sent: Wednesday, January 17, 2018 6:07 PM
To: Ward 5
Subject: [WARD5] Bloomingdale Bertha Holiday Court challenge McMillan development segregated apt. entrance
To: Ward 5
Subject: [WARD5] Bloomingdale Bertha Holiday Court challenge McMillan development segregated apt. entrance
As a Save McMillan Supporter, just wanted to put on your radar the Court hearing next week. Can you be there?
On Wednesday, January 24th, folks
will gather at the highest court in DC, the Court of Appeals, to hear the
appeals case of Bertha Holliday who is challenging Jair Lynch's 'poor door' he
wants to include in one of the buildings approved by the Zoning Commission to
be dropped on top of our McMillan Park. See the video here >>
We want to support Bertha in
challenging the racism that is part of the overall privatization and
destruction of McMillan Park, can you be there with us?
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=== MCMILLAN RACIAL SEGREGATION CASE
HEARING ====================================================
Wednesday, January 24, 2018
Gather 8:30am; Enter Courtroom 9:00amDC Court of Appeals, 430 E Street NW
Judiciary Square (redline)
RSVP: smac.dc@gmail.com // 202-491-3996 (bertha)
http://www.savemcmillan.org/calendar
=================================================
Please like our FB page & share,
share, share with all!
fb.me/SaveMcMillan
Paz,
Chris Otten202-810-2768
PS: Check out our Holiday 2017 recap
here >>
http://www.savemcmillan.org/holidaze2017
And, if you are interested in how
the Office of Planning is trying to use language to push the McMillan project
through, along with blowing out the rest of the city, come to the Grassroots
Planning meeting this weekend, January 20th >> https://www.facebook.com/events/391746771252522/
Adams Morgan Stained Glass
1231 Randolph Street, NE
Washington, DC 20017
Tel: 202-232-8391
www.adamsmorganstainedglass.com
1231 Randolph Street, NE
Washington, DC 20017
Tel: 202-232-8391
www.adamsmorganstainedglass.com
See this subsequent tweet from Bloomingdale resident Natalie Hopkinson:
So important re: resegregation in Washington, D.C. What is old is new again. And sometimes the developers and city officials are black. Kudos @bgholliday7 and @pauljcerruti for unearthing this history and staying on the case #BloomingdaleDC https://t.co/swbK7LZkrL— Natalie Hopkinson (@NatHopkinson) January 18, 2018
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