Category Archives: news

Phil in the News

Some news stories from the past week involving Chairman Mendelson:

DC Has ‘Discussion’ on Legal Pot on Fear Hearing IllegalCouncil Chairman Phil Mendelson has said that by March the city would begin to treat Initiative 71 as law, which would in effect legalize possession without any way to buy pot legally.  [Reuters]

Pot Push Could Land DC Council in Jail – WUSA9 asked Council Chair Phil Mendelson about the letter, he said,”Congress is the bad guy in all this. Because Congress is the one that says they want to restrict what we can do.”  [WUSA9]

 

Phil in the News

Some news stories from the past week involving Chairman Mendelson:

Marion Barry University — and Free Tuition?  DC Lawmaker Proposes Overhaul of UDC – Council member Jack Evans (D-Ward 2) joined Orange in co-introducing the measure. But Council Chairman Phil Mendelson (D), who controls the committee dealing with UDC, called the proposal to rename the university after Barry “premature.”  Mendelson said he expects a commission to be formed to consider the appropriate way to honor Barry’s legacy.  [The Washington Post]

In 11th-hour Move, DC Finds More Hotel Rooms for Homeless Families – Before the filing was withdrawn, DC Council Chairman Phil Mendelson (D) said he was “troubled” by the breadth of the city’s request in court. “I suspect that the city lawyers felt somehow that strategically it was better to go for more than is needed,” he said. “But politically, it’s a poor choice.”  [The Washington Post]

Boom or Bust?  DC Lawmakers Try to Make Sense of Budget Contradictions – Council Chairman Phil Mendelson (D) lectured City Administrator Rashad M. Young on Bowser’s handling of budgetary matters, arguing that the hiring freeze, routine underspending and an expected $21 million court settlement made the program cuts unnecessary.  “There’s an excess of caution, an unnecessary level of caution,” Mendelson said. “You have it within your control to control spending and ensure the budget that was balanced remains balanced. The freeze has been really obnoxious to the council.”   [The Washington Post]

 

Phil in the News

Some news stories from the past week involving Chairman Mendelson:

DC Firefighters’ $47 Million Overtime Bill Roils City Budget – DC Council Chairman Phil Mendelson (D) said he would urge Bowser (D) this week to make up the difference in the current spending plan by tapping an array of one-time funding sources and instituting a hiring freeze and other checks on her agencies to settle the dispute. But Mendelson said he saw no choice but to finally square up with the city’s firefighters.  “The reality is that the city has turned a blind eye toward this problem and lost at every level . . . and there are no options left,” he said. “It’s time to deal with it.”  [The Washington Post]

Broken Traffic Camera Contributed to Massive Revenue Decline, DC Police Say – “Public safety should be about making sure motorists are not running red lights and not speeding,” Mendelson said. “When we become too greedy about how much we are going to get in revenues, then when there is the slightest blip, we have a budget problem.”  [The Washington Post]

Bill Would Pack More Punch into DC Distracted Driving Tickets – “We continue to see a problem with distracted drivers on our roads,” Mendelson says.  [WTOP]

DC Police Start Giving Out Concealed Gun Permits – Mendelson said of Gura’s comments: “He must be thinking that everybody should be able to carry a firearm. “There is nothing in the law that prevents anyone from applying. . . . The law was designed to weed out those who don’t have a need to carry.”  [The Washington Post]

DC to Conduct Homeless Count Wednesday as Shelter Population Has Surged – To contend with a budget shortfall, D.C. Mayor Muriel E. Bowser (D) this month froze spending on an initiative to hire more case workers for city homeless families. D.C. Council Chairman Phil Mendelson (D) questioned the move this week, saying the city is not doing enough to get its homeless parents the services they need to help pull themselves out of poverty.  [The Washington Post]

DC’s $204 Million Surplus as Fiscal Puzzler for Bowser – Council Chairman Phil Mendelson (D) also said that spending the surplus would be unnecessary, explaining that sources to cover the current budget gap had already been identified. “The crisis is greatly exaggerated,” he said.  [The Washington Post]

Bowser Administration Says DC ‘Operating in Crisis Mode’ on Homeless Issue – “It seems we’ve thrown money at different places and maybe we haven’t thrown it in the right place,” said Mendelson, who re­organized the council this year to give his office more direct oversight of the city’s homeless budget.  [The Washington Post]

 

 

 

Phil in the News

Some news stories from the past week involving Chairman Mendelson:

DC Hoping Obama Will Address Statehood in State of the Union Address – When asked what he would like to see the president discuss in the speech in a recent phone interview, Mendelson said, “Absolutely a reaffirmation with regard to [Obama’s] support for self-determination and equality for all district residents.” “This is a position that cannot be stated often enough because most citizens of the United States do not understand the unique status of the District,” Mendelson pointed out. “There’s a huge misunderstanding and so the more that there’s public discussion of our situation, it only helps us.”  [Roll Call]

Key DC Posts Remain in Flux Three Weeks Into Muriel Bowser’s Administration – DC Council Chairman Phil Mendelson (D) said he was “deeply concerned” about Staton’s departure. “The agency has made tremendous progress,” he said, citing renewed confidence across the government in the procurement department’s ability to conduct solicitations.  [The Washington Post]

Mendelson Bill Would Increase Penalties for Distracted Driving – DC Council Chairman Phil Mendelson introduced a bill this session, the Enhanced Penalties for Distracted Driving Amendment Act of 2015, to strengthen those penalties. It would increase the fines for those who are found to have repeatedly engaged in distracted driving, culminating in a driver’s license suspension for those who have three violations within eighteen months. The bill was co-introduced by Bonds, Allen, and Nadeau and referred to the Committee of Transportation and the Environment chaired by Mary Cheh.  [WashCycle]

 

 

Phil in the News

Some news stories from the past week involving Chairman Mendelson:

Report: DC Region’s Unfunded Infrastructure Needs Total $58 Billion – “We want transportation to run smoothly, electricity and natural gas to turn on when we flip the switch, water to flow when we turn on the tap, clear communications in an emergency, and first-class public buildings,” said Phil Mendelson, board chairman of the Council of Governments as well as the DC Council chairman, in the preface to the draft report. “However, maintenance and replacement costs in critical sectors have been deferred as leaders have been faced with competing priorities, and the need for investing in new systems to support growth and maintaining a state of good repair totals in the billions.”  [The Washington Post]

DC Challenges Congress to Halt Marijuana Legalization in Nation’s Capital – The District of Columbia defied its new Republican overseers in Congress on Tuesday, challenging the House and Senate to either block or let stand a voter-approved ballot measure to legalize marijuana in the nation’s capital.  DC Council Chairman Phil Mendelson (D) sent the voter-approved measure to Capitol Hill, starting the clock on a 30-day review that Congress has invoked only three times in 40 years to quash a local D.C. law.  [The Washington Post]

Regional Council Wants WMATA to Appear After Monday Incident – DC Councilman Phil Mendelson also supports the measure and hopes Metro will provide answers.  “We have a right to understand what happened. Recognize that there is an investigation and we shouldn’t impede that investigation. But we still have a right to know and it’s understandable that people want answers as soon as possible,” says Mendelson.  [WTOP]

Metro’s a Mess.  All the More Reason to Ride It – A Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments report presented today highlights the region’s conundrum. The D.C. area faces a $16 billion budget gap for public transportation (mostly Metro) in order to meet the needs of a growing population over the next 10 years, the report finds. There’s also an $8.5 billion budget gap for roads and bridges, which will only be exacerbated if more people turn away from Metro and start driving.  “Maintenance and replacement costs in critical sectors have been deferred as leaders have been faced with competing priorities, and the need for investing in new systems to support growth and maintaining a state of good repair totals in the billions,” Phil Mendelson, chair of the DC Council and the Council of Governments board, warned in the report’s preface. He wrote those words before the Metro accident, but they’re all the more haunting in its aftermath.  [The Washington Post]

‘Death with Dignity’ Laws Are Proposed, Bringing National Debate to DC and Md. – “In terms of occupying the council, I wouldn’t put it in the same league as marriage equality,” an issue that drew hundreds of witnesses to hearings, Mendelson said. “This is not a jurisdiction that gets all twisted up over a lot of these social issues.”  [The Washington Post]

Alarm Bells Ring for Washington Regional Economy on Growth, Infrastructure – District Council Chairman Phil Mendelson (D), who initiated the council of governments study, said it was necessary because politicians too often found it easy to ignore the problem.  “The reason [infrastructure] is underfunded is it’s not sexy,” Mendelson said. “It’s far better for me to go out and talk about how I’m going to end homelessness than for me to go talk about how I’m going to put the city on a five-mile-a-year water main replacement schedule.”  [The Washington Post]

DC Council Sets Up Hearings on Marijuana Regulation – D.C. Council Chairman Phil Mendelson said the council should be in the clear to hold public meetings on the proposed legislation, which would codify regulations regarding marijuana that were not included in a voter-approved ballot initiative.  “All we’re talking about is a hearing,” Mr. Mendelson said. “I don’t think that’s inappropriate. And I think trying to muffle public discussion would implicate constitutional issues. It would be bad public policy.”  [The Washington Times]