On Jul 12, 2016, at 10:58 AM, "Andrea Rosen aerie@rcn.com [HistoricWashington]" <HistoricWashington@yahoogroups.com> wrote:
Although two hearings have been held on the Advisory Neighborhood Commission Omnibus Amendment Act of 2016 (B21-0697), the second of which took place on July 6, written statements concerning the Act can still be submitted to the Committee on Housing and Community Development for the next eight days, via e-mail to Irene Kang (ikang@DCCouncil.US) with a cc: to Oscar Montiel (omontiel@dccouncil.us). (I myself plan to also email my statement to the members of the Council directly.) The record closes at 5:00 p.m. on Wednesday, July 20, 2016.
Reading
through the Act, I noticed some additional provisions (beyond the controversial
new exemption of ANCs from FOIA and the continued exemption of ANCs from the
Open Meetings Act) that I thought I should bring before the Historic
Preservation community in particular.
The
introductory summary of the Act (lines 65-69) states that this is "A Bill
. . . to amend the District of Columbia Official Code and the Historic Landmark
and Historic District Preservation Act of 1978 to ensure that third-party
protest groups cannot supplant the ANC as the representative of the community
in protesting a licensing matter before the Alcoholic Beverage Control
Board or the Historic Preservation Board . . . ." [Boldface added by
me]
This
is translated into code in Section 5 of the Act (lines 834-847), which states:
Sec.
5. Section 13(b) of the Historic Landmark and Historic District
Preservation Act of 1978 (D.C. Law 2-144; D.C. Official Code ℥ 6-1112(b)), effective March 3, 1979, is amended to read as
follows:
"(b) All proceedings
pursuant to this subchapter shall be conducted in accordance with the
applicable provisions of Chapter 5 of Title 2, except that
only
the following parties shall have standing to protest a license or permit before
the Historic Preservation Board:
"(1) An abutting
property owner;
"(2) An affected ANC;"(3) In the case of property owned by the District within a 600-foot radius of the establishment to be licensed, the Mayor;
"(4) In the case of property owned by the United States within a 600-foot radius of the establishment to be licensed, the designated custodian of
the property; or
"(5) The Metropolitan Police Department District Commander, or his or her designee, in whose Police District the establishment resides."
Call
me paranoid, but I can't help but think that this provision, as it pertains to
historic preservation, is a direct attempt to nullify the kind of protest
groups that repeatedly coalesced, over nearly 30 years, around the development
of McMillan, most recently Friends of McMillan Park (FOMP), although it may
also mistakenly hope to include the McMillan Advisory Group (MAG), despite the
fact that the MAG was specifically created by the District to be the official
representative of the community in negotiating with the developer. But the
intent may also be to shut down such groups as the "200-Footers" who
successfully protested the illegal development of 901 Monroe Street, albeit not
before the Historic Preservation Board but in the Court of Appeals.
Sadly
it has been my observation that there is good reason to go around the ANC in
representing a nuanced community view, as ANCs are invariably and often
successfully wooed by developers.
Which
brings me to another unwarranted change in the ANC Omnibus Amendment Act:
Sec.
3. Section 333(a)(7) of the Board of Ethics and Government Accountability
Establishment and Comprehensive Ethics Reform Amendment Act of 2011 (D.C. Law
19-124; D.C. Official Code ℥ 1-1163.33(a)(6)), effective
April 27, 2012, is amended by striking the number "$25" and inserting
the number "$100" in its place."
At
first blush, raising the cap on ANC campaign contributions to $100 seems merely
ridiculous because ANC races often go uncontested, and the expenses associated
even with a contested race are minor. Democracy is enhanced when ANC
candidates walk their turf and speak directly with their neighbors; $100s in
the coffers encourages the expenditure of funds on mailers and signs.
What is less obvious is that allowing outsized contributions, affordable
to the very few, invites the practice of the few wielding undue influence over
ANC commissioners.
This
bill flies in the face of the move towards publicly financed political
campaigns, with a goal of taking money out of politics, even as it attempts to
restrict channels by which residents can influence the fate of their
communities.
Andrea
Rosen
Barnaby
WoodsChevy Chase, Ward 4
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