#DCStatehoodNow Update

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@TeamMuriel
 
Muriel Bowser Ward 4
 
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John A. Wilson Building

1350 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20004

 

Phone: (202) 727-2643
Email: muriel.bowser@dc.gov

Chief of Staff:
John Falcicchio

City Administrator:
Kevin Donahue

Director of the Mayor's Office of Legal Counsel:
Eugene Adams

Senior Advisor:
Beverly Perry
 
Director of Mayor's Office of Community Affairs:
Faith Gibson Hubbard

Director of Mayor's Office of Community Relations and Services:
Julia Irving

Scheduling Requests:
mayor.dc.gov/page/invite-mayor

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

March 26, 2021

Letter from the Mayor

Dear Washingtonians, 

This week, I was honored and proud to testify before the House Oversight and Reform Committee at a hearing on the Washington, DC Admission Act (H.R. 51). I called on Congress to right a 220-year-old wrong and finally end taxation without representation in Washington, DC. 

Below, you can watch the hearing and read my prepared testimony. You can also read the report that I submitted with my testimony, Democracy Deferred: Race, Politics, and D.C.’s Two-Century Struggle for Full Voting Rights.

We are taxpaying Americans who have all of the responsibilities of our fellow Americans in the 50 states. The only difference is we do not have a vote in the Congress or two Senators. We deserve full citizenship, and that’s why we demand DC statehood. 

Together, we will right this wrong and make Washington, DC the 51st state. 

Sincerely, 

Muriel Bowser

Watch the hearing:

HR 51 Hearing

Read Mayor Bowser's prepared testimony:

Chairwoman Maloney, Ranking Member Comer, and members of this esteemed Committee, on behalf of the 712,000 residents of the District of Columbia, I thank you for convening this hearing on H.R. 51, the Washington, D.C. Admission Act. In particular, we thank you for shepherding this measure to passage during the 116th Congress; and we respectfully seek your support to marshal it to passage again.

I want to especially thank our Congresswoman, Eleanor Holmes Norton, who has championed equality for Washington, DC throughout her tenure, while skillfully delivering jobs, opportunity, and greater self-determination.

I am Muriel Bowser, Mayor of Washington, DC, and I am honored to come before this committee to ask Congress to right the wrong that happened some 220 years ago when the residents of the District of Columbia were stripped of their full congressional representation.

Two years ago, in the 116th Congress, I came before this committee under the leadership of the late Elijah Cummings to dispel erroneous arguments, against DC Statehood. These are the bad-faith arguments we hear time and time again:

  • They say Washington, DC statehood is unconstitutional, even though several constitutional experts have repeatedly declared that to be false. Article I of the Constitution is not an obstacle because, as H.R. 51 makes clear a “federal district” will remain for the federal government, its buildings and its workings; and the rest of the area, where people live, will become the separate state.
  • They say Washington, DC is too small, or our economy is not diverse enough. Even though we’re bigger by population than two states and pay more federal taxes per capita than any state, and we pay more total federal taxes than 22 states.
  • They say that Washington, DC is badly governed. This is simply not accurate. In fact, by many objective measures DC is better governed than most states. We have balanced our budget 25 times in the last 25 years. And we already operate as a state and perform the same functions that states do. During the coronavirus pandemic, we have led COVID-19 testing, contact tracing and vaccination efforts, just as states do.

Again, two years ago we debunked those claims as thinly veiled attacks on our political leanings, and quite frankly our diversity, and history of black political power.

Today, I come to urge this committee and this Congress to move beyond the tired, non-factual anti-DC Statehood rhetoric and extend full democracy to the residents of the District of Columbia as the founding fathers intended. I was born in Washington, DC and generations of my family – through no choice of our own – have been denied the fundamental right promised to all Americans: the right to full representation in the Congress. The simple fact is, denying American citizens a vote in the body that taxes them goes against the founding principles of this great nation.

The disenfranchisement of Washingtonians is one of the remaining glaring civil rights issues of our time. Even as the Constitution was being drafted, several members foresaw the situation that Washingtonians face today, a capital city of second-class citizens. When white residents were the only population to be affected, as they were the only ones with suffrage at the time, the founding fathers pledged to correct the wrong, and the Continental Congress was eager to offer amendments to correct it. But ultimately, the Constitution did not resolve the concerns around the future federal district’s congressional representation or self-governance.

Why did the motivation to right the wrong disappear? As time passed, and the District became majority African American, the drive to correct the wrong was replaced by racist efforts to subvert a growing and thriving majority Black city. Historic records are replete with statements of successive members of Congress referencing the “negro problem” and the “color problem” within DC as a justification to withhold Congressional representation. This was their way of saying that African Americans are unable to govern themselves, or vote for their best interests, and should therefore be denied political power and suffrage. So, does this body still believe that to be the case?

Next month, we will celebrate President Lincoln signing the Emancipation Act that freed the slaves in the District of Columbia on April 16, 1862, months before the Emancipation Proclamation freed other enslaved people. I hope to remind this Congress that District residents are still not free, as we remain disenfranchised in this body.

I urge all of you to do what our founding fathers and over two centuries of lawmakers failed to correct and grant full democracy to DC residents through statehood by enacting H.R. 51. The incremental enfranchisement of the District has historically been a bipartisan effort but is in no way a substitute for full representation in Congress.

Washington, DC has been a true partner to the federal government in every possible aspect even though Congress and the Presidents have been sporadic partners to us. We have supported continuing the critical operations of this body and other federal agencies within our borders. The federal government leaned on our health departments to process coronavirus tests and administer vaccines to federal employees and contractors. However, several provisions of federal aid to respond to the coronavirus pandemic denied us state-level funding, shortchanging us over $755 million in fiscal relief even though we operate as a city, county, and state. We now thank you Madam Chair, Speaker Pelosi, Leader Schumer, your democratic colleagues, and President Biden for righting that wrong last week in the American Rescue Plan.

The events of January 6th, where Congress was overtaken by insurrectionist mobs, show that Congress need not fear the new state of Washington, DC as it does not currently fear the states of Maryland and Virginia. Rather, the new state will be a necessary partner to securing the federal interests, not a detractor. Arguing that Washingtonians must remain disenfranchised to protect the interests of the federal government is dangerous, laughable, and downright insulting.

In conclusion, after years of disinvestment and disinterest when Congress did exercise full exclusive jurisdiction over the District and ran all local governance, my predecessors and I, with Council Chairman Phil Mendelson and his colleagues and their predecessors, have worked hard to develop the fastest improving urban schools, invest in housing, healthcare facilities, recreational facilities, as well as a sports and entertainment economy, and built one of the most attractive meeting destinations in the country. We have proven our sound leadership and that there is no reason not to right this 220-year-old wrong.

Thank you again for allowing me to appear before the committee today and I look forward to answering your questions.

In This Week's Newsletter:

Are you pre-registered? Have you helped someone else pre-register?

PreRegister

Mayor Bowser and DC Health are calling on Washingtonians to help their friends, family, and neighbors pre-register for a vaccination appointment. 

  • Website: vaccinate.dc.gov (any day, any time)
  • Call Center: 1-855-363-0333 (Monday through Friday, 8:00 a.m. - 7:00 p.m. and Saturday and Sunday, 8:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m.)

At this time, all residents and District workers who are not yet vaccinated are encouraged to pre-register, regardless of current eligibility.

Invitations are sent out:

  • Thursdays by 10:00 a.m.
  • Sundays by 10:00 a.m.
  • And, only if any appointments still need to be filled, Tuesdays by 10:00 a.m.

Learn more at vaccinate.dc.gov

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Progress at Skyland

Skyland

This week, as part of March Madness, Mayor Bowser announced new progress at Skyland Town Center in Ward 7, including the beginning of residential leasing and five new food service leases. Once completed, Skyland Town Center will be a vibrant town square with upwards of 450 homes, a grocery store, a medical office building, and up to 156,000 square feet of retail. 

The newest food service leases announced this week, include:

  • Roaming Rooster, which launched in the District in 2015 and serves fresh free-range grain-fed chicken, will open its fourth location at Skyland.
  • &Pizza, which launched in the District in 2012 and serves pizza, will open its tenth location at Skyland.
  • Maizal, a South American street food eatery, will open its first standalone and first sit-down location at Skyland.
  • Mezeh, a Mediterranean-influenced eatery, will open its second location at Skyland.
  • Tropical Smoothie Café, a national fast-casual café concept inspiring healthier lifestyles, will open its third DC location at Skyland.

The Mayor also celebrated the start of residential leasing at The Crest, the first residential property to open at Skyland. The 290,000 square foot building features 263 homes, a mix of studio, one-bedroom, and two-bedroom apartments, as well as a fitness center and courtyard pool and grills. Of the 263 units, 53 are set-aside for those earning up to 80% of Median Family Income (MFI) and 26 are designated as workforce units (80% to 120% MFI).

Learn more about the progress at Skyland HERE

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Register Now for Summer Camps

Summer Camps

This week, the DC Department of Parks and Recreation (DPR) opened registration for DPR Summer Camps. Families are now able to enroll young people between the ages of 3 and 13 in a wide range of 2-week camp sessions that go from Monday, June 28 until Friday, August 20. 

DPR has modified the protocols for hosting in-person camps and will conduct all summer offerings in accordance with DC Health safety guidelines.

Learn more about and register for summer camps HERE

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Do you know what's recyclable?

Recycling

This week, the Department of Public Works (DPW) launched a “Feet on the Street” campaign to improve the District's curbside recycling program. During the eight-week campaign, DPW will tag recycling carts that contain unacceptable items and reward residents whose carts exemplify best practices.

DPW will inspect recycling carts on 16 recycling routes and leave "Oops” tags when non-recyclable items are found, such as plastic wrap, bags and film, clothing, yard waste, ropes, chains, furniture and scrap metal.

The “Perfect Set Out” is recycling that:

  1. Is contained in the DC government-issued recycling can or bin.
  2. Does not contain any unacceptable recycling items.
  3. Includes recycled items that are emptied and rinsed.

Learn more about what's recyclable HERE, and practice your recycling skills HERE

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