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DC Council Kicks Off New Year with First Legislative Meeting of 2026
While there is no such thing as a quiet legislative year for the DC Council, 2025 definitely outdid itself in terms of the scope of the legislative lift that year required. From the kickoff of Council Period 26 to approval of redevelopment of the RFK Stadium site to omnibus public safety and housing reforms to balancing the books in a tight budget year, the Council had its hands full in 2025.
Starting 2026 off right, the Council's first Legislative Meeting of the year took on a number of legislative priorities, from economic development to public safety to education. The meeting's agenda was built on the kind of modest, day-to-day, meat-and-potatoes bills that do not always attract media attention, but which are the essence of what the Council does and how it strives to maintain its focus on assisting the public and improving life in the District.
Soul of the City and Anacostia Business Improvement Districts
Via three pieces of emergency, temporary, and permanent legislation, the Council created a new “Soul of the City” Business Improvement District (BID). The BID will encompass the Congress Heights neighborhood as well as the non-federal Saint Elizabeths East campus and other adjacent areas. It will consist of portions of the Martin Luther King, Jr. Avenue, Alabama Avenue, Southern Avenue, and Wheeler Road corridors. The BID will focus on beautification, revitalization, and economic development.
By simultaneously passing emergency, temporary, and permanent legislation, the Council accelerated the ability for the District to collect the new BID's assessments, accelerating its establishment and the roll-out of its services. The new BID will be the thirteenth in the District and the second in Ward 8. In other action at the Legislative Meeting, the boundaries of the first BID in Ward 8, the Anacostia BID, were expanded to incorporate the future 11th Street Bridge Park project, as well as to bridge gaps between the previous BID boundaries and the adjacent Anacostia-Bolling military facilities.
Home Purchase Assistance for Transit Workers
This legislation expands eligibility for the Government Employer-Assisted Housing Program (GEAHP) to include workers employed by transit agencies owned or subsidized by the DC government. The GEAHP provides DC government employees buying their first home in the District with zero-interest loans and matching grants to go towards down payments and closing costs for home purchases within DC. Currently, only roughly one in ten DC-area transit workers lives in the District, and this legislation seeks to increase those numbers.
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Tips for Staying Informed About the Council
Today, more than ever, there are a broad array of resources on how to stay fully informed about the work the Council is doing. Please be sure to engage in all these ways so that you can stay educated about all the work we are doing. This is a rich and deep toolkit. Please take the time to investigate all the tools in detail.
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A one-stop-shop for everything related to hearings. See a list of upcoming hearings, sign up to testify, submit testimony, see witness lists, and view pre-submitted testimony all in one spot, for the first time ever. It’s a real game-changer!
Database of all Council legislation, going back to 1991 (work is underway to add 1975-1990 as well). Search by councilmember, committee, keyword, date, vote, or any combination of these. Legislative timelines, links to documents and video (where available), plus the ability to subscribe and follow bills.
A listing of all Council events, including how/where to watch, the topic, and links to relevant legislation.
The Rules the Council runs by, including our internal rules of conduct, and which agencies are overseen by which committees.
Council Office of the Budget Director website: www.dccouncilbudget.com
Every possible document and resource related to the Council’s past and present budget deliberations can be found here. Be sure to check out the informative and addictive Budget Lookup Tool—drill down graphically, layer after layer, to the most granular level.
Learn how the Council is now investigating potential racial equity impacts of legislation through new Racial Equity Impact Assessments (REIAs), and check out the REIAs that have been drafted thus far.
Social Media (Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook): @councilofdc
The lifeblood of Council communications, mixing the essential with the offbeat. All Council events are referenced three times on social media—the day before, a “watch live” announcement, and once the video is available for on-demand review.
“Hearing the Council” Radio Show/Podcast: 3PM weekdays on 96.3FM HD4, subscribe here, or search “Council of the District of Columbia” where you get your podcasts
If you think you already know all about our councilmembers, or the topics they tackle, then you clearly haven’t listened to our “Hearing the Council” radio show and podcast. Even Wilson Building staffers and journalists get whole new insight into councilmembers from our “getting to know you” episodes, and our deep dives on policy topics give members 30+ minutes to discuss and face questions on a single topic of interest to them. A must-listen for reporters, advocates, and political junkies.
Newsletter (subscribe here)
After each Legislative Meeting, we send out a newsletter featuring an article summarizing what happened at the meeting. Not what’s newsy, not what any one councilmember accomplished…an as-plain-language-as-possible explanation of what the Council as a whole did at the meeting–what happened and why.
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Archived Video of Council Events
Here (some with searchable unofficial transcripts) and here
DC Code
https://code.dccouncil.gov/
All regulations and resolutions passed by the pre-Home Rule, Presidentially-appointed DC Council, some still in effect today.
An illustrated guidebook with key information on DC’s history, demographics, and form of government. It includes details on the Council’s role, structure, membership, and organization, as well as laying out the Council’s legislative and budget processes.
Three plan-language documents on how the Council runs—one on the Council “by the numbers,” one on the legislative process, and one on the budget process.
RSS Feeds (subscribe here)
Be notified immediately any time the Council adds a calendar event, an event video, or a news article to our website.
Day-by-day hyperlinked list of every document filed with the Office of the Secretary, from newly-introduced legislation to contracts to Auditor’s reports
Emergency Act (EA) Report (here, then scroll to the middle of the page)
List of all active Emergency Bills (in effect for 90 days) and their related Temporary Bills (in effect for 225 days)
Subject to Funding Legislation (here, then scroll to the bottom of the page)
List of all bills passed subject to appropriations, along with their subsequent appropriation status, if any. Reminder: Per Council Rules, any such law (or provision of a law) that remains unfunded for two fiscal years is subject to repeal in the Budget Support Act in the third fiscal year following its enactment
Statutorily Required Reports to the Mayor and the Council (here, then scroll to bottom of the page)
DC law requires that many reports be compiled by specific agencies and submitted to our elected officials. This is the list of such reports that must be provided to both the Mayor and the Council. (pending update)
Statutorily Required Reports to (just) the Council (here, then scroll to bottom of the page)
DC law requires that many reports be compiled by specific agencies and submitted to our elected officials. This is the list of such reports that must be provided solely to the Council.(pending update)
Directly access the complete data set underlying our Legislative Information Management System (LIMS) legislative database, for your own creative legislative analysis uses
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