Art Place Construction Notice 2/20/2023



Ed. Note: My understanding is that the ANC will be taking a vote on the matters listed under “Legal Matters.”
From ANC 5A
ANC 5A Meeting
Wednesday, February 22, 2022 at 6:45 pm
ANC 5A’s meeting will be held online only in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Join Zoom Meeting: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81870709297?pwd=WDRMMGpvaVVGSGc5amNSU003UDE0QT09
Meeting ID: 818 7070 9297
Passcode: 847136
Dial In: 301 715 8592
AGENDA ITEMS
I. Call Meeting to Order 6:45 pm
II. Quorum
III. Agenda Review/Acceptance
IV. Minutes (January 2023 and Emergency Meeting February 2023)
IV. Commission Business
A. Parliamentarian
B. Minutes for Approval (January Meeting and February Special Meeting 2023)
C. Treasurer: Cell Phones and Communication (Zoom account increase)
D. Legal Matters
1. 5A03: Mundo Verde Community Agreement
2. 5A08: McDonald’s Public Space Committee Application
3. 5A08: Z Burger/Convenience Store 4975 South Dakota Ave NE
4. 5A09: ANC 5A Satellite Office Space MOU
5. 5A09: Park development at the southwest corner of South Dakota and Riggs Road
E. Committee Formations
1. Public Safety
2. Social Media
3. Parks Task Force
4. Transportation
5. ANC Office
V. Community Updates
A. MPD
B. Mayor’s Office
C. Councilmember Parker’s office
VI. Reports & Presentations
A. Yu Ying Addition-Carlie Fisherow
B. Office of Campaign Finance-Natasha Alexander
C. Fort Totten Park-National Park Service
VII. Community Comment Period
VIII. Next Meeting: March 22, 2023
IX. Adjourn
Reminder, tonight ANC Commissioners Gordon Fletcher (5A08) and Emily Singer Lucio (5A03) will hold a joint meeting to discuss McDonald’s public space permit application. The Zoning Commission approved McDonald’s rezoning request in order to build a drive-thru as a matter of right. Before McDonald’s can actually do that though, they need to get public space permits for the curb cuts necessary to operate a drive-thru. The District Department of Transportation (DDOT) is in charge of the public space permit process.
Meeting information
ANC 5A08 and 5A03 Joint Meeting on McDonald’s Public Space Committee Application
Thursday, February 16, 2023 at 7:00 pm
Join Zoom Meeting
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/82747576285?pwd=SmJaZFl0U3VwNHkzNEVmRHU1YzE1UT09
Meeting ID: 827 4757 6285
Passcode: 826515
+1 301 715 8592 US (Washington DC)
Meeting ID: 827 4757 6285
Passcode: 826515
The restaurant, located at 4950 South Dakota Avenue NE, was previously in ANC 5A03. Following redistricting, it is in ANC 5A08. Residents within 200 feet of the restaurant reside in both single member districts (update: according to Commissioner Lucio), so the commissioners are holding a joint meeting.
DDOT did not support the request for rezoning. DDOT does not have to approve McDonald’s application for public space permits to operate a drive-thru. DDOT has denied public space permits for operation of drive-thrus in other parts of the city in the past, so doing so here would not be unprecedented.
As noted previously, counsel for McDonald’s stated that she believed that DDOT’s report was written the way it was during the rezoning process to indicate that DDOT would “put up a fight” during public space. That is why during the rezoning hearing, Zoning Commission Chair Anthony Hood said that he hoped that DDOT would not put up any roadblocks during public space.
McDonald’s is requesting the support of the North Michigan Park Civic Association (NMPCA) and ANC 5A for its public space application. NMPCA will support the application. The expectation is that ANC 5A will support the application given that the ANC supported the rezoning request. Commissioner Fletcher, who is now chair of the ANC, is of course getting pressure to support the public space application. But there are a lot of new commissioners and they do not have to support this application.
In my experience with public space applications, ANCs in this area typically do not get into the weeds about the application or even really notify residents about the application. They rarely ask questions. It is important to ask questions though, especially in a case like this one where there is a proposal for a drive-thru where none existed previously.
This meeting is an opportunity for residents to ask questions and let the commissioners know if you do not support the drive-thru or the public space application. My understanding is that the full ANC plans to take a vote on the application at the ANC meeting on February 22.

Culture Coffee Too will be closing its doors at 300 Riggs Road NE at the end of March after five years of providing a space for culture, coffee, and conversation in Riggs Park. Owner Veronica (Ms. V) Cooper opened the Riggs Park location after moving from a location on Kennedy Street NW. She stated in her closing note that she has enjoyed building community in Riggs Park over the last five years and now it is time to move on. Build community she did.
A couple of years ago, I wrote a letter in support of the coffee shop for an award. The words are fitting now as I think about how much I will miss Ms. V. I wrote then:
As the owner of Culture Coffee Too, a coffee shop and arts space in the Riggs Park neighborhood in Northeast Washington, DC, since 2017, Veronica Cooper has made it her business to make her business the cultural and community hub of the neighborhood.
Culture Coffee Too is the quintessential neighborhood small business sitting in the heart of the Riggs Park neighborhood’s commercial corridor. In the three years that Culture Coffee Too has been open, I have seen and been part of the overwhelmingly positive impact it has had on the community. When I served as president of the neighborhood civic association, I had the pleasure of speaking at the ribbon cutting ceremony to celebrate Culture Coffee Too’s opening in 2017. In 2018, Ms. V spearheaded the Riggs Park Art Crawl, bringing art and patrons to neighborhood businesses in Riggs Park. Another successful art crawl followed in 2019, making the neighborhood a little brighter with placemaking murals at neighborhood businesses.
At the end of 2018, I helped start the neighborhood Main Street. The Parks Main Street supports the commercial corridors of the Riggs Park and Manor Park neighborhoods in Washington, DC. It was only fitting that we launched the Main Street at Culture Coffee Too, inviting neighborhood residents, business owners, and all those interested in seeing the commercial corridor of these neighborhoods thrive to join together to make it happen. With Culture Coffee Too, Ms. V. serves as a connector—connecting small business owners, connecting artists, connecting residents. Any time someone steps inside the shop for a cup of tea, a breakfast sandwich, or maybe a smoothie, taking in the artwork on the walls of that month’s featured artist, it is likely that person will leave having met someone new.
I have been told that the coffee shop may be replaced by a Wingstop, a fast food chicken restaurant. (More about this on-brand decision by JBG later.)
Culture Coffee Too will hold a closing party on March 18 at 7:00 pm. Until then, feel free to stop in to give Ms. V her flowers.
On his ANC website, ANC Commissioner Zachary Ammerman (5A09) has been detailing his efforts to work with the office of Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton to request that the National Park Service (NPS) do more extensive soil testing in Fort Totten Park. Congresswoman Norton sent a letter to NPS on February 7, 2023. WTOP also reported on Congresswoman Norton’s letter.
Recall, NPS informed ANC 5A and the Ward 5 Council office in 2017 that the agency was conducting soil testing in an area on the west side of Fort Totten Park that had been used for staging by Metro to build the green line in the 1990s. NPS stated it was testing “out of an abundance of caution” after being informed that fill dirt used to rehabilitate the land was brought from the toxic WWI testing site at Spring Valley. NPS said then that they were not too concerned about Fort Totten Park because of the topography of the land and because the staging area where the dirt was brought and eventually removed was not near any waterways or pedestrian access points. NPS later informed the ANC and the Ward 5 council office of the results of that testing. NPS distributed a community engagement handout to the ANC 5A commissioners and Ward 5 Council office but residents did not receive a copy. NPS also later sent the commissioners and the Ward 5 Council office a copy of the report but that information was not passed along to residents.

Fast forward to 2020 when NPS began construction of a formal trail between Gallatin and Galloway Street west of South Dakota Avenue. This is an area of the park east of the station tracks. NPS halted construction after contractors found an unexploded WWI shell along the informal path. NPS contracted for soil testing.
At the time, I noted that it was strange that a WWI shell would be found in an eastern part of the park when the staging that NPS had been concerned about was in the western part of the park.


As this testing was underway, residents and I reached out to Congresswoman Norton’s office and NPS about our concerns both during a quarterly NPS town hall meeting and over email. Congresswoman Norton’s office never addressed the questions during the town hall meetings and simply forwarded the questions to NPS. NPS said that there was no evidence that soil from Spring Valley was brought to the area on the eastern side of the park. NPS said that the soil was confined to the western part of the park and had been removed. Residents and I inquired exactly which areas of the park would be tested. Testing was confined to just the area along the planned trail (full study). NPS restarted construction on the trail in July 2021 after “negative test results.” NPS halted construction again after encountering infrastructure for the green line tunnel. NPS is now supposed to be finishing up design for an alternative location.
Local media reported on the possible connection between the ordnance on the trail and the Spring Valley site in 2022. Congresswoman Norton issued a press release about her “concern” over this discovery and held a meeting with the US Army National Corps of Engineers, Metro, and NPS. NPS stated during meetings that the testing found no evidence of any other unexploded ordnances nearby and found no contamination of the soil beyond that expected of parks in urban areas. NPS stated they would do more test kits and “monitor the area.”
ANC Commissioner Ammerman put together a timeline of events and requested of Congresswoman Norton’s office that NPS conduct more extensive testing. We will see how NPS responds to Congresswoman Norton’s request. What is clear is that this whole thing could have been dealt with properly a long time ago.






Catching up on posts.
Over the next several months, Metro will be replacing the bus shelters at Fort Totten Metro station. Metro is installing transition bus shelters as part of this process. These are temporary shelters wrapped in artistic images. The temporary shelters still have electronic bus arrival signs and there is a small bench in each shelter.
See more information about the transition bus shelter project at https://www.wmata.com/service/status/details/Bus-shelter-replacenment-project-jan2023.cfm and https://www.wmata.com/service/status/details/Metro-Transition-Shelter-Installation-Program.cfm.
Signage at the transition shelters explains that the artistic designs are based on hand-drawn renderings of the Metro system by employees of the architectural firm that designed the Metrorail system, including an individual named Gene Streett. See more about the images at https://www.wmata.com/initiatives/art-in-transit/ait-fort-totten.cfm.

Ward 4 Councilmember Janeese Lewis George rescheduled the virtual budget forum/listening session to Wednesday, February 15 at 7:00 pm. Register at https://janeeseward4.com/listen.
From ANC 5A
ANC 5A08 and 5A03 Joint Meeting on McDonald’s Public Space Committee Application
Thursday, February 16, 2023 at 7:00 pm
Join Zoom Meeting
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/82747576285?pwd=SmJaZFl0U3VwNHkzNEVmRHU1YzE1UT09
Meeting ID: 827 4757 6285
Passcode: 826515
+1 301 715 8592 US (Washington DC)
Meeting ID: 827 4757 6285
Passcode: 826515
AGENDA ITEMS
McDonald’s Public Space Committee Application
From ANC 5A
ANC 5A Satellite Office Space Meeting
Wednesday, February 15, 2023 at 8:00 pm
To join the video meeting, click this link: https://meet.google.com/yaa-task-dzm
To join by phone, dial +1 925-621-0939 and enter this PIN: 635 734 652#
Virtual meeting rules:
Participants will be muted until called upon. A timer will be used, and time limits will be strictly adhered to. The meeting will be recorded, a transcript will be taken, and both the recording and the transcript will be posted after the meeting. Raise your hand to be called upon during the community comment and discussion segment.
Accessibility:
The Committee strives to host meetings that are inclusive and accessible and that enable the full participation of all residents of the Commission area. The meeting will be closed-captioned. Please contact Commissioner Ammerman at 5a09@anc.dc.gov at least 48 hours before the meeting start time if you have any requests for special accommodations needed to participate fully in the meeting.
Meeting subject: Soliciting public comment and discussion on use of the ANC 5A satellite office space located at 420 Galloway Street NE
Background info. and documents: In 2017, ANC 5A acquired approximately 600 square feet of office space located at 420 Galloway Street NE as part of the Community Benefits Agreement in the P.U.D. for the Modern at Art Place development. Starting in 2020 and continuing to the present, Ward 5 Mutual Aid has been using the office on an informal basis as a supply hub for their organization. ANC 5A formed this Committee during its January meeting to provide recommendations to the entire ANC 5A Commission on formalizing this relationship and developing a long-term strategy for using the office.
Documents:
AGENDA ITEMS
DC Mayor Muriel Bowser will be holding a series of FY2024 budget engagement forums this week. You can also share your budget ideas and priorities by completing the form at budget.dc.gov. This is the time to ask for what you want.
Join fellow DC residents to share your values, priorities, and ideas with the Bowser Administration as the FY24 Budget is developed.
Senior Budget Engagement TeleTownhall
When: Wednesday, February 8, 2023 at 12:00pm
Call-In Number: 844-881-1314
RSVP: https://tinyurl.com/FY24SeniorBEF
Budget Engagement Forum #1
When: Thursday, February 9, 2023 at 6pm
Where: Jackson-Reed High School, 3950 Chesapeake Street NW
RSVP:https://tinyurl.com/FY24JacksonReed
Budget Engagement Forum #2
When: Saturday, February 11, 2023 at 11am
Where: Eastern High School, 1700 East Capitol Street NE
RSVP: https://tinyurl.com/FY24Eastern
Leave a Voicemail
Call 202-442-4755 to share your ideas and priorities.
This morning, I attended the funeral service for my neighbor Mrs. Cobb. She lived a full 96 years. Mrs. Cobb and her family moved to Riggs Park on Hamilton Street NE around 1960, one of the first Black families to do so. She held a bachelor’s degree in nursing from Hampton (Institute) University and trained a generation of nurses in DC. She was active in her Michigan Park Christian Church community.
It was a treat to know Mrs. Cobb and to hear the tributes to her. Reggie and Chucky Royster, two brothers who grew up on Hamilton Street with Mrs. Cobbs’ sons–Benny, David, and the late Tyrone–shared that Mrs. Cobb was part of a group of families who all moved onto the 900 and 1000 blocks of Hamilton Street NE in the late 1950s and early 1960s. These families looked out for each other’s families, took each other’s children to school, fed each other’s children, and corrected each other’s children when they did something wrong. They worked in a number of different professions. Reflecting on their time growing up on Hamilton Street in the 1960s and ’70s, Reggie Royster said it was like being part of a miracle on Hamilton Street.
I always tell people one of the reasons I was drawn to this part of Riggs Park and Hamilton Street in particular was that when I was looking at my house, it reminded me of the neighborhood where I grew up. A neighborhood where neighbors knew one another, held block parties and parades, always shared a friendly wave and hello, and looked out for each other.
By the time I purchased my home on Hamilton across the street from Mrs. Cobb in 2010, she would have been 83 years old. One would not know it. I certainly did not. She was pretty active and spry well into her 90s. A neighbor and I joke that the women on the block all live into their 90s because of all the steps in these houses. Or maybe it is because they are some of the kindest people I know. In any case, Mrs. Cobb started slowing down probably around 93 years old. She would sit on her porch every day simply enjoying the fresh air and quiet.
Mrs. Cobb was part of a group of elderly Black women on the block whom I know only by last name. Only today did I learn her first name. Marianne P. Cobb. May she rest well and memories of her be a comfort and blessing to her loved ones.

Ward 5 Councilmember Zachary Parker Budget Forum
February 6, 2023
7:00 pm
Woodridge Library
1801 Hamlin Street NE
Come share your budget priorities. RSVP at ward5.us/budget23.
Be sure to complete the Ward 5 Budget Survey at ward5.us/oversightform.
Lamond-Riggs Citizens Association Public Meeting
February 6, 2023
7:00 pm
February 2023 Meeting Agenda
1. Welcome/Invocation
2. Officers Report, Minutes, Treasurer Report
3. Updates from Elected Officials & PSA
4. LRCA Budget Review
5. John Stokes, DC Department of General Services (DGS)
6. LRCA Development Taskforce presentation regarding greenspace project on land adjacent to Food & Friends
7. Community Concerns/Closing
To view the meeting online, click the following link.
https://us06web.zoom.us/j/81370798567?pwd=SlhqTlJrWVMyMVlOSEh0UUExbmMyQT09
Meeting ID: 813 7079 8567
Passcode: 881450
Dial into the meeting by phone:
Call: (301)715-8592
Meeting ID: 813 7079 8567
Passcode: 881450
Read LRCA’s February 2023 Newsletter.
Become a member of LRCA. View map of LRCA’s boundaries.

If you live in North Michigan Park and wish to receive North Michigan Park Civic Association meeting notices and updates, please email president Carmen Williams at carm8954@aol.com to be added to the distribution list.
North Michigan Park Civic Association
Meeting Agenda
Wednesday, February 1, 2023
7:00 pm
Virtual Meeting
Meeting ID 882 7345 2110
Passcode 930240
Call In 1-301-715-8592
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/88273452110?pwd=dmZ3R1liOTRKY1FyS3hlYlBqWnBWUT09
Unfortunately, no face-to-face meeting at the NMP Recreation Center – Recreation Center new hours of operation close at 8:00 pm
· Call to Order
· Opening Prayer – Silent
· Roll Call of Officers
Meeting Protocol
Guest Speaker
Leila Batties – McDonald’s Update
Q&A
Community Leader Reports
Carlos McKnight – Ward 5 Councilmembers Office
Q&A
Guest Speaker
Officer Robert Hamrick – 4D Community Affairs
MPD Officer from the Weapons Unit
Community Leader Reports
Mayor’s Office – Christian Starghill
ANC Commissioners that represent NMP
5A02 – Karlus Cozart
5A03 – Emily Lucio
5A08 – Gordon Andrew Fletcher
5A09 – Zachary Ammerman
Civic Association Updates
Open Discussion:
Coming Events in 2023
Next Month Guest
At its public meeting on January 26, 2023, the DC Zoning Commission took final action, voting (3-1-1) to approve a map amendment request for the McDonald’s property at 4950 South Dakota Avenue NE to change the zone district from MU-3A to MU-7B (Zoning Commission case no. 22-19, recording at approximately 1:24:50 mark). The new zoning district permits a drive-thru as a matter of right, which is the reason McDonald’s pursued this rezoning. Zoning Commission Chair Anthony Hood, Vice Chair Robert Miller, and Commissioner Joseph Imamura voted in support. Commissioner Peter May opposed. One seat is vacant.
The zoning commissioners rested on the points they made at the initial vote, described in this post. Recall DC’s Office of Planning supported the rezoning request, while the District Department of Transportation (DDOT) objected to the request. In order to actually build a drive-thru, McDonald’s will have to go through DDOT’s public space permit process.

Note: The deadline has been extended to March 6, 2023.
DC residents ages 14 to 24 can now apply to participate in DC’s 2023 summer youth employment program. The deadline to apply is February 28, 2023. Apply at https://summerjobs.dc.gov.
Scheduled Maintenance
Due to fiber-optic cable installation for radio and signal systems, service will be shut down between Rhode Island Ave and Fort Totten: