History of Tenant Rights: DC Walking Tour to set off from Columbia Heights this Sunday, March 10 at 1pm; Stomp Out Slumlords coordinating a 10am Wilson Building rally on March 12th to protect tenant TOPA rights; Secure DC (Crimnibus) passes in DC Council,
History of Tenant Rights: DC Walking Tour to set off from Columbia Heights this Sunday, March 10 at 1pm
The History of Tenant Rights: DC Walking Tour takes place this weekend,
starting at 1pm on Sunday, March 10 at Columbia Heights Civic Plaza in
DC. The event will take attendees on a walking tour through Columbia
Heights, exploring the past, present and future of tenant rights in the
area. The tour will explore how Columbia Heights tenants could and have
previously come together to demand rent control and better housing
conditions, buy their buildings from landlords and form cooperatives,
organize tenant unions and exercise their power to get the DC Council to
pass the Tenant Opportunity to Purchase (TOPA) Act. The Walking Tour
will be led by Professor Amanda Huron, organizers with the Stomp Out
Slumlords campaign and tenant organizers in Columbia Heights. Sign up in advance to not miss weather updates and notices.
Stomp Out Slumlords coordinating a 10am Wilson Building rally on March 12th to protect tenant TOPA rights
TOPA, which gives tenants a seat at the table when their building is up
for sale, is currently under attack from landowners as the real estate
industry is ramping up efforts to roll back the protections tenants in
DC have won over the last 50 years. Stomp Out Slumlords is coordinating a rally at 10am on Tuesday, March 12 at the Wilson Building (1350 Pennsylvania Ave NW) to tell the council to resist the landlord lobby’s biggest attack on tenants’ rights in DC history.
Developers (and the mayor) are plotting to hack away at TOPA, and
tenants at a recent city-wide meeting determined that they would resist
any drawdown of tenant protections in the city. Fight back — tenants and
socialists demand TOPA for all, fully funded and with no cuts or
loopholes. Register here and email [email protected] to plug into the fight.
Secure DC (Crimnibus) passes in DC Council, weakened from grassroots resistance effort
In an extended Council session on Tuesday, March 5, the Secure
DC legislation passed its final vote 12-0 (with 1 voting present).
The
Coalition that rallied against the measure (which includes Metro DC
DSA) was able to organize 1,611 people to send over 24,963 letters to
the DC Council and pull 62 organizations into opposition. Hundreds
packed the Council meetings on February 6 and March 5 in opposition to
the legislation. As a result of this push, several amendments have
severely weakened the final legislative package, including:
Capped pretrial detention provisions to expire and require reauthorization later this year;
An
amendment passed by CM Lewis George, and adopted by the majority of the
Council, maintained (rather than lowered) the current threshold on
felony thefts;
Weakened DNA collection to occur
only after probable cause is determined. This provision remains still
alarming — CMs Lewis George, McDuffie and T. White voted against
reentering this policy into the final version of Secure DC;
Watered
down and thwarted anti-mask provisions included in the bill, which
include carve outs for people exercising first amendment rights;
removed provisions that would withhold MPD officers’ names from adverse action proceedings.
The
final version of this legislation also includes “drug-free zones,”
though it’s likely to be constitutionally challenged and overturned.
In
the hearing, Councilmembers remained ambivalent about Secure DC’s
effectiveness, doubting CM Pinto and Mayor Bowser’s belief that this
legislation would significantly address and impact violence in the city.
(Read more coverage: from The Washington Informer, 730DC’s March 6th coverage.)
Metro DC DSA’s Abolition working group played a critical effort in the
campaign, and will debrief at the next DC-based working group meeting on
March 19. DSA members are encouraged to ask questions or get involved
by joining the #abolition channel on the Metro DC DSA slack.
BRIEFS
Volunteer to re-elect Janeese Lewis George for DC Council — Saturday and Sunday, March 9 and 10
Councilmember Janeese Lewis George is running for re-election for
District Council in Ward 4, but she is being targeted by both the police
union and Mayor Muriel Bowser for the strong stances she has taken as a
socialist in office. Metro DC DSA is organizing to defend her seat.
While in office, Councilmember Lewis George has introduced legislation
to bring a Green New Deal for Social Housing to DC, advocated to expand
rent control and raise the minimum wage for tipped workers, fought to
claw back the carceral state and much more. There are many ways to
volunteer as a socialist, including research and communications support.
DSA will also be holding canvasses every weekend for Janeese,
including this Saturday, March 9 from 1 to 4pm at the Riggs LaSalle
Recreation Center and Sunday, March 10 from 1 to 4pm at the Shepherd
Park Community Center. Sign up here to get updates on future canvasses.
Metro DC Happy Hour at Aslin Brewing — tonight at 5:30pm
Celebrate International Women’s Day with comrades at a chapter-wide
happy hour at Aslin Beer Company, DC’s newest union brewery, tonight
from 5:30 to 8pm. It’s organized by our new Community Builders team;
come catch up with comrades you know, meet new comrades, get plugged
into our chapter’s work on the Trans Rights and Bodily Autonomy National
Campaign and support union beers. For more information and to RSVP,
click here.
Maryland Palestine Solidarity and #CeasefireNow Coalition Update
On Monday, March 4, MDC DSA-endorsed Delegate Gabriel Acevero’s resolution HJ0002,
Supporting a Long-Term Ceasefire in Israel and Palestine, was heard in
the Maryland General Assembly’s House Rules and Executive Nominations
Committee. The hearing
drew over 60 witnesses from different parts of the state, as well as
different ages, political affiliations and faith backgrounds, all united
in their call for an immediate, permanent ceasefire. An insurgent
alliance in Maryland is organizing in support of Palestinian solidarity
and urging supporters to visit IMAN’s Action Alert to send an email or Justice 4 All’s dialer tool to make a call to Maryland politicians. On Monday, March 11 at 1 PM, there will also be a hearing on HJ0005,
a resolution meant to protect students and academics facing attacks for
their speech in solidarity with Palestine. Maryland DSA members are
encouraged to contact the Montgomery County branch at [email protected] to get involved with DSA’s Palestine solidarity organizing work.
Apply Now: Join the New Member Community Cohort, starting in late March
Anyone new to Metro DC DSA is invited to apply to join
the Spring 2024 New Member Community Cohort. The cohort will hold
trainings and social events weekly from late March through mid-April
covering “Why We Organize,” “What is Socialism?,” chapter operations and
resources and a dedicated social outing. It will be a great way to get
to know new people and familiarize yourself with socialism, along with
the chapter and those in it. But don’t wait — cohort applications are due by March 12.
Montgomery County DSA launching renter canvass — Saturday, March 16
Last year, the Montgomery County Council passed rent stabilization
legislation limiting rent increases to 6% or less, thanks to tireless
organizing by tenant groups including Metro DC DSA. But landlords across
the county continue to increase rents by 10% or more because the county
government is not yet enforcing the law. Now, the county council must
pass rent stabilization regulations as soon as possible so that the
county government can start enforcing rent stabilization. On Saturday,
March 16, join the Montgomery County branch to talk to tenants in
Gaithersburg and get tenants involved in demanding that the county
council pass strong regulations ASAP. RSVP here.
Socialist Night School: Prison Capital — Saturday, March 16
Metro DC DSA’s Political Education working group will be hosting their next hybrid Socialist Night School
on Saturday, March 16 at 6pm at the Cleveland Park Neighborhood Library
and on Zoom. Come out to listen to Lydia Pelot-Hobbs discuss her new
book Prison Capital: Mass Incarceration and Struggles for Abolition Democracy in Louisiana.
Louisiana had the highest per capita rate of incarceration in the
nation (and thus, the world) every year between 1998 to 2020 except for
one. Understanding Louisiana’s carceral crisis extends our understanding
of the interplay between the crises of mass criminalization and racial
capitalism while highlighting the conditions of possibility for
dismantling carceral power in all its forms. RSVP here.
Montgomery County Council considering ban on consent searches
On Tuesday, February 27, the Montgomery County Council held a public
hearing on the Freedom to Leave Act, a bill that would ban consent
searches. The hearing was a great success, with overwhelmingly positive
testimony from a diverse group of people — from legal experts to
individuals sharing their stories and powerful policing critiques from
LGBTQ, racial justice and feminist perspectives. A work session on the
bill has not yet been scheduled, but MDC DSA members can monitor the
#montgomery-county Slack channel for updates on the expected timeline.
To learn more about the bill and for a sample script to use to contact
your council members, you can view the coalition’s outreach guide and talking points here.
Fairfax Connector workers win big after 15 day strike
DSA national has its own site of course. DSA Feed is an RSS feed that aggregates multiple DSA publications — including our own Washington Socialist — in one convenient place. More from the National Tech Committee here.
MDC DSA Publications Schedule:Washington Socialist is
on a quarterly schedule. Updates to the current number will be published
on a rolling basis over the next month. Get on record about your
socialism! Contributors to the Washington Socialist can email
submissions or questions to [email protected]. Weekly
Updates are scheduled for Fridays — March 15, 22 and 29.
Want more INFO ACCESS? Submit your Update suggestions to the tip line.
Or even better, participate in MDC DSA’s publications effort. We write,
we edit, we design, we do the tech — there are so many ways your hand
could lighten the load in 2024 and beyond. Check us out on #publications and let us know what you would like to write, or write about.
COMMUNITY BULLETIN
Film Screening: Tomorrow’s Freedom | Friends Place on Capitol Hill Come out to Friends Place on Capitol Hill or via Zoom on Thursday, March 14 for a screening and discussion of Tomorrow’s Freedom — a critical film in the conversation about peace in Palestine and Israel. Made over the course of five years, Tomorrow’s Freedom provides an intimate look into the lives of the family of imprisoned Palestinian political leader Marwan Barghouthi. RSVP here.
Help push and pass sweeping EmPOWER law in Maryland | Green & Healthy Homes Initiative Join the Maryland Sierra Club and coalition partners in Annapolis on
Wednesday, March 13, from 11:30am to 12:30pm, to champion EmPOWER
reform. EmPOWER, established in 2008 to enhance statewide energy efficiency, needs support to reach its full potential. If passed, HB864
would align the program with state greenhouse gas reduction goals,
increase funds for improvements in homes and multi-family buildings,
mandate multilingual outreach for inclusivity and enhance transparency
and accountability requirements for utilities. RSVP here to let the General Assembly know that they need to pass a strong EmPOWER bill this year.
Residents
who don’t know how to find information about disaster recovery
assistance or can’t take time away from work to apply for aid can have a
harder time getting quick help from federal and state agencies. From The Conversation via Route Fifty
After
a string of scandals and amid rising bills, lawmakers in statehouses
across the country, including in Maryland, have been pushing legislation
to curb utilities spending ratepayer money on lobbying, expert
testimony in rate cases, goodwill advertising, charitable giving, trade
association membership and other costs. At least a dozen states have
considered bills to limit how gas, water and electric utilities can
spend customers’ money, according to a tracker maintained by the Energy and Policy Institute, a watchdog group. Maryland Matters/States Newsroom
The flame of thought, the magnificence of art, the wonder of discovery, and the audacity of invention all belong to revolutionary periods when humanity, tired of its chains, shatters them and stops inebriated to breathe the breeze of a vast and free horizon.
- Virgilia D'Andrea
Sent via ActionNetwork.org.
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