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Results tagged “regulatoryaffairs”
Go Home Already: Watch Your Step

Go Home Already: Watch Your Step

>> An early morning fire struck some vacant buildings located at 14th & Maryland. [Frozen Tropics] >> Could potential supporters of the D.C. Voting Rights bill in the Senate, such as Hillary Rodham Clinton, Barack Obama, Joe Biden and Chris Dodd, end up being out campaigning and miss the vote, thus leaving it open to a filibuster threat? [Free Ride] >> The D.C. Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs is trying revoke the business... more ›

Mary Cheh Wants You to Kill Your Television. Sort of.

The office of Council member Mary Cheh (D-Ward 3) has released an alert to the news media on this slow August Wednesday afternoon, and that means it's going to get a lot more coverage than it probably deserves. For our part, we wanted to mention it also as an excuse to post the funniest video our staff could find of someone destroying a television. The winner is above. For her part, Cheh is concerned... more ›

Fenty Names More Cabinet Appointees

Fenty Names More Cabinet Appointees

Mayor Adrian Fenty held a press conference this morning to announce a slew of new cabinet-level nominations for his administration. Topping the list was his decision to go with current interim director of DCRA, Linda Argo, as his nominee to run the department. Argo was previously deputy director of DCRA, responsible for the agency’s public service enhancements. It's a somewhat uncharacteristic move from Fenty, who has tended to focus his hiring efforts on bringing in... more ›

Morning Roundup: Get Yer Gun Edition

Morning Roundup: Get Yer Gun Edition

We do hope you had a pleasant, relaxing, not too horribly hot weekend, Washington. Even if you didn't, chances are your Monday morning is shaping up to be less of a hassle than it is for the staff of Sen. Jim Webb (D-VA). Webb finally admitted over the weekend that he owns the gun that his aide, Phillip Thompson, was arrested for carrying into the Capitol in March. What kept him from clearing up... more ›

Morning Roundup: After Unbuckled Edition

Morning Roundup: After Unbuckled Edition

Soooooo. We threw a little concert last night. And it was, to put in the simplest terms, teh awesome. But you know. Maybe a little toooooo awesome. Woke up late with a pounding headache kind of awesome. Ahem. Here's your half-assed roundup. From the WaPo: Hey, didja know it was still cold and icy and miserable out there? Oh OK, you did. Well then, how about the fact that five District schools have tested positive... more ›

That Thumping Sound Is Not Your Hangover

That Thumping Sound Is Not Your Hangover

Many residents in eastern Capitol Hill have been kept awake the last couple nights. A pulsating collision noise, followed by a loud metallic echo, has been ringing throughout the neighborhood at all hours of the day and night. We heard the sound going strong on Saturday night; others reported it stopped in the wee hours of the morning, only to start again at around 4:30 a.m., continuing more or less uninterrupted until 11 p.m. Bright... more ›

Here Comes Street Meat

Here Comes Street Meat

Our snack prayers have been answered. After studying vending operations in New York, Chicago and other cities, D.C.’s Department of Consumer & Regulatory Affairs is ready to give our street carts another go. Intimidation tactics–mob-style, we imagine–led to the 1998 moratorium on licenses, which finally ended Oct. 15. more ›

Too Bad There's No 'Boot' for Buildings

Too Bad There's No 'Boot' for Buildings

The Examiner has the goods today on D.C.'s Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs, the agency responsible for most contstruction permits and business licenses in the city. According to the Office of the Inspector General, it appears the department lacks the resources to collect on more than 22,000 infractions still unpaid, which total a whopping $8.825 million in fines. The department has no system for collecting outstanding fines and penalties, infrequently imposes liens and may... more ›

Shaw Establishments May Get Liquor Relief

Shaw Establishments May Get Liquor Relief

For nearly a year, DCist has been following the conflict developing in Shaw between proprietors of new restaurants and bars and neighborhood churches, which oppose the opening of new establishments that allow drinking. Area churches have relied, so far, upon a provision in the law which grandfathers existing liquor stores and taverns, but which does not allow new establishments, "within 400 feet of a public, private, or parochial primary, elementary, or high school; college or... more ›

Georgetown Neighborhoods in the Midst of a Crackdown

Georgetown Neighborhoods in the Midst of a Crackdown

The city hasn't forgotten about the October 2004 death of Georgetown student Daniel Rigby. WTOP reports today that owners of residences in the neighborhood where Rigby's apartment caught on fire are in the "midst of a crackdown," with D.C. Consumer and Regulatory Affairs officials nearly a third of the way through 91 houses targeted for possible housing code violations. more ›

Cut That Grass!

Cut That Grass!

Grass and weeds that are more than 10 inches tall could lead to fines. During growing season, property owners (commercial and residential) are required to maintain their premises in a healthy and sanitary manner, free of trash and excessive vegetative growth. more ›

Public Roundtable on Elimination of Rent Ceilings Today

Public Roundtable on Elimination of Rent Ceilings Today

In regards to the much talked about possible elimination of the current rent ceiling system here in the District, there will be a public roundtable on the issue today at 5:00pm at the John A. Wilson Building, 1350 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W. Two weeks ago, the City Council's Committee on Consumer and Regulatory Affairs voted 4 to 1 to overhaul the system. Right now, the cap is based on a particular unit's "rent ceiling", while the... more ›

Council Calls Hearing on Shady Evictions

Council Calls Hearing on Shady Evictions

Landlords and building owners engaging in unethical, possibly illegal activities to evict tenants? Never! more ›

Campaign for Tenants Rights Kicks Off

Campaign for Tenants Rights Kicks Off

The dramatic decrease in the availability of affordable housing in the District has pushed one local organization into action. more ›

Looking at the South Capitol Corridor

Looking at the South Capitol Corridor

In a third meeting of a series, the Anacostia Waterfront Initiative, the D.C. Office of Planning and the D.C. Department of Transportation will be presenting general concepts and a planning timeline for the South Capitol Street corridor and the proposed site for the new baseball stadium. Public comments will be heard as well. So if you have some thoughts about South Capitol Street, head over to the King Greenleaf Recreation Center at 201 N St. SW tomorrow evening. more ›

Morning Roundup: Rent and Russian Brides Edition

Morning Roundup: Rent and Russian Brides Edition

... First up, the District says that it has struck a deal with Howard University to open a hospital on 19th Street in Southeast, a quadrant of the city that is currently underserved in terms of quick access to medical care. But please note that the Post has "Deal" set off by quotation marks in its headline, saying in its lede that it is a "deal in principle." more ›

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