Phil in the News

Some news stories from the past week involving Chairman Mendelson:

On Budget, Bowser and Mendelson Can’t Agree to Disagree – “Perhaps it makes good press, perhaps it creates the appearance of a controversy,” Mendelson says. “But there is none.”  [Washington City Paper]

DC Parking Tickets, Meters Could Cost More – “We have not changed the parking fine in many, many years,” says D.C. Council Chairman Phil Mendelson. “Even at $30, our fine will be below what the suburban jurisdictions are.”  [WTOP]

DC Council Chairman’s Budget Nixes Tax Hikes, Summer-Jobs Expansion – “24-year-olds ought to have a real job, not a six-week minimum wage job,” [Mendelson] said at a budget briefing held Tuesday.  [The Washington Times]

DC Council Approves $13B Budget for 2016 – “The differences were so minor and with any package that’s $13 billion there’s going to be something to disagree about,” Mendelson says.  Mendelson made a few last minute concessions, including the extension of the “Kids Ride Free” Metro program.  “I’m pleased with how the budget has evolved,” Mendelson says. “I made the point that the budget as a package reflects inputs from a lot of people.”  [CBS DC]

DC Council Holds Taxes and Approves Housing, May Not Need Budget Blessing from Congress – The $12.9 billion budget adopted by the council Wednesday makes “enormous strides” by funding a number of initiatives focused on lowering burdens on lower- and middle-income residents, reducing homelessness and prioritizing school modernization projects efficiently, Mr. Mendelson said.  [The Washington Times]

Mendelson Cautious on Budget Autonomy Act – “If in fact we have autonomy, this will be the first time in 20 years that our budget will actually be approved before the start of the fiscal year,” Mendelson said, noting the District’s fiscal year begins in October, like the federal fiscal year, but appropriators often do not approve a final spending plan until months later. “Because we’re tied to the congressional process, things are delayed or vulnerable to shutdowns,” he said.  [Roll Call]