Ward 4 Councilmember Janeese Lewis George has submitted her budget request letter to DC Mayor Muriel Bowser. The mayor is expected to share her proposed budget with the DC Council on March 22.
CM Lewis George notes that her budget requests are informed by the neighborhood listening sessions she held over the past couple of months. Her requests are centered around three core themes:
- Investing in city services and infrastructure,
- Building safer and stronger communities, and
- Becoming a more equitable District.
The letter addresses a number of issues such as housing, facilities, support for seniors, behavorial health, and more. Read the full letter.
Items of note to Lamond-Riggs below, copied from the letter.
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Restore programming at Fort Stevens, Lamond, and Petworth Recreation Centers. Over the past year DPR operating hours and programs were cut at several Ward 4 recreation centers, limiting social and recreational opportunities for our seniors and positive, healthy recreation outlets for our youth. Due to staffing challenges, experienced rec center staff were moved from sites where they have strong community ties. DPR must fund additional positions in FY24, offer competitive hiring incentives, and more actively promote the agency’s job openings so it can fully restore hours and programming.
$1 Million to fund the creation of a Riggs Park violence intervention team. I urge you to expand the footprint of the Cure the Streets program at the Office of the Attorney General by establishing a team to serve the Ward 4/Ward 5 Riggs Park neighborhood. Crew violence and turf battles are the primary drivers of violence in our community, including recent shootings and stabbings in Riggs Park. We must augment the capacity of violence interruption outreach to bring long-lasting resolutions to the feuds that plague Riggs-Lamond-Brightwood-Petworth.
Fund a WMATA bus route between Lamond-Riggs and Coolidge High School. Students in the Lamond and Riggs Park communities need safe – and soon to be free – routes to and from school. A new school-hours bus route dedicated to Coolidge High School’s eastern boundaries would help reduce truancy and keep kids from harm’s way of dangerous traffic.
I also urge you to maintain level funding, at a minimum, for the following priorities:
- The Brightwood Park-Petworth Cure the Streets program, and all OAG Cure programs.
- All grants for Ward 4’s Main Streets: The Parks, Upper Georgia Avenue, Uptown,
Takoma, and Petworth. - $935,000 for the Office of the Ombudsperson for Children.
- All local and TANF funds for child care subsidies, dedicated and rollover funding for the
Early Childhood Educator Pay Equity Fund, and funds committed to strengthening early
childhood development through Healthy Steps and Healthy Futures.
Priority infrastructure projects for Ward 4 roadways and at School and Recreational Facilities.
The list below reflects new and outstanding maintenance, physical infrastructure, or small capital projects priorities. Many of these issues remain open work orders from my 2022 DPR summer readiness and DCPS back-to-school tours. Please contact my committee office for follow up and expected completion dates on these maintenance items:
- Coolidge High School track bathroom plumbing needs to be replaced
- Whittier Elementary School HVAC system replacements in old wing
- Lamond Recreation Center swing set requires a new installation
- Riggs-LaSalle Recreation Center neighbors request a track be added around their fields; spray park renovations
- Move up funding for rehabilitating Eastern Avenue, NE between New Hampshire and Whittier
- Include funding for a new park and connected cycle tracks around the future Metropolitan Branch Trail Trailhead at Riggs Road and South Dakota Avenue, NE
- Improve multimodal safety along South Dakota Avenue NE in Riggs Park/Fort Totten

























