Past is Present: Is D.C.'s new comp plan a con plan?
Proposed changes to District plan neglect role of preservationMay 10, 2018, 3:07pm EDT
The D.C. Preservation League has been following, with increasing
concern, the process to amend the D.C. Comprehensive Plan.
DCPL had expected to see the
proposed revised framework element and to have access to the many – more than
3,000 in total – proposed amendments to the plan in the fall of 2017. However,
the Office of Planning (OP) only released this information a few months ago.
Instead of opening the framework to the required 60 days’ notice for public
comment, the mayor has sent the document directly to the D.C. Council for
approval.
...
In this document, OP has not only
failed to recognize the many important ways in which preservation contributes
to this District’s vitality, but it also actively seeks to reduce the
protections afforded to historic properties. One of the explicit goals of the
recently completed zoning rewrite as stated in the plan was to harmonize zoning
with the requirements of historic preservation. The new zoning regulations did
little in that regard and the amendments proposed to the framework now aim to
widen that gap and further undermine historic protections with even more
inconsistent zoning regulations and decisions.
...
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