Author Archives: Anna

DCentric was created to examine the ways race and class interact in Washington, D.C., a city with a vibrant mix of cultures and neighborhoods. Your guides to the changing district are reporters Anna John and Elahe Izadi.

Spent: Choose Your Own Misadventure

"Spent" is a decision-based game that simulates what it's like to live with very little.

I just spent a few minutes “playing” Spent, a website which simulates what it’s like to be low-income and face difficult choices regarding housing, family, transportation and work:

Work hard. Do the right thing. Homelessness is something that will never happen to me. Sometimes, all it takes is one life-changing experience to land you on the streets: a job loss, death of a loved one, divorce, natural disaster, or serious illness.

That message is everywhere, but it’s easy to ignore– and that’s the point of this simulation. The site is programmed to serve up realistic challenges that force players to make extremely difficult decisions– like paying for cafeteria food you can’t afford because your hypothetical child complains about the stigma of free lunches or putting a pet to sleep because you can’t afford the treatment that would save its life.

In the case of the former, after a choice is made between coming up with $3 per day for lunch money, or taking the risk of your child starving to avoid the shame of accepting free food, a screen like this pops up:
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Wal-Mart and Communities of Color

Flickr: Mike Licht, NotionsCapital.com

While the Washington Times probes whether it’s a conflict of interest for Council member Yvette Alexander’s advisers to work as paid consultants for Wal-Mart, over at Colorlines, Juell Stewart examines Michelle Obama’s endorsement of the company.

In January, the first lady joined Wal-Mart executives in southeast D.C.—a traditionally black neighborhood in which the controversial chain recently announced plans to open stores—to announce the company’s effort to make its pre-packaged foods healthier and more affordable than less healthy options by 2015. Obama called it a “huge victory” that left her feeling “more hopeful than ever before.”…

Other critics say that by teaming up with corporate giants like Wal-Mart, the first lady risks undermining activism on other issues, like fair labor practices in communities of color that are increasingly dependent upon service sector jobs.

Cheap food isn’t always nutritious. Could Walmart make healthy food more affordable?

The “huge victory” Obama championed in the Wal-Mart announcement is creating viable choices for informed consumers. She and others have argued that communities can only win if there is cost parity between healthy food and the high-calorie snacks that contribute to obesity. “If you have a dollar menu item and a healthier salad that costs three times as much, it’s not a choice for people living on a limited income,” says Antronette K. Yancey, co-director of the UCLA Kaiser Permanente Center for Health Equity.

Tasty Morning Bytes – Inappropriate Walmart Ties, Rambunctious Raccoons and Criminal Cronies

Flickr: HunterJumper

Who knows what darkness lies in the heart of this masked criminal?

Good morning, DCentric readers! Thank Gray it’s Friday! What…the Mayor doesn’t get credit for that? Oh.

Alexander aides on Wal-Mart ‘team’ Eyebrow-raising: “In January, Ms. Alexander said she was in favor of Wal-Mart building a store in her ward as a way to stimulate jobs and retail options. But…a community member questioned whether Wal-Mart’s relationships…were appropriate in light of their ties to Ms. Alexander, according to people who witnessed the exchange.” (Washington Times)

Raccoons Chasing People From DC Metro Station Because it IS Friday: “Lisa Campbell says there’s a family of raccoons chasing passengers as they enter and exit the Fort Totten Station on Galloway Street in northeast D.C. Lisa says she has even spotted a raccoon inside the station near the ticket machine and that Metro has posted a sign asking people not to feed the raccoons.” (myfoxdc.com)

No landfill search for body of slain teen, D.C. police say Search could cost $1 million, take six months: “So they’re just going to let her rot there,” said Frazier’s mother, Caroline. “They’re not even going to try. That’s what they’re telling us: It’s not worth it. My baby doesn’t deserve that.” (The Washington Post)

Should Criminals and Scumbags Get D.C. Jobs? One had restraining order for stalking a 13-year-old: “If…Gray supporters that got city jobs recently aren’t qualified, then they should be fired…But such dismissals should be based solely on the fact that they’re cronies — not because they may have once had a criminal record.” (DCist)

DMV Daily: Biddle vs. Biddle Oh, this wacky campaign: “At-Large Council candidate Bryan Weaver, one of three candidates whose petition signatures are being challenged by interim Councilmember Biddle’s campaign, has discovered that the Biddle camp is challenging the validity of Biddle’s own signature on Weaver’s petition.” (NBC Washington)

D.C.’s Hispanic population has a new political voice Fenty protege. p.s. Many local Hispanics are not registered to vote: “In a city that’s had a rising Hispanic population for the past decade, Lopez is the first serious Latino candidate for public office….” (Washington Examiner )

Acquittal of the ‘Negress’ Minnie Gaines

New York Times, July 21, 1869

A desperate black victim of domestic violence named Minnie Gaines confesses to bludgeoning the father of her unborn child– who was white. Progressives fret about whether an all-male jury will treat her fairly. The public is riveted to the scandalous news story.

If all of that sounds unfamiliar, there’s no need to ratchet up the radio or turn on the TV. Gaines went to trial in 1869. She is a part of D.C. history, yet a cursory search of the internet yields nothing about her besides the blurb to the right, from the New York Times.

Gaines’ story takes up just two pages in a new book by Kate Masur, a History professor at Northwestern University, but those two pages contain a powerful example of what Masur offers in her study of racial equality during reconstruction– “An Example for All the Land: Emancipation and the Struggle over Equality in Washington, D.C.

When asked about the Gaines case, Masur added:

It was the first murder trial in D.C. to be heard by a racially mixed-race jury: six black men, six white. Reporters followed the jury and wrote about how they took an omnibus out to the suburbs and had a picnic on a Sunday. It was scandalous that they ate and worshiped together; the jury was breaking taboos, so the trial was a huge media event.

Women active in D.C.’s suffrage movement also attended the trial, they saw it as a feminist issue. One female activist wrote a letter to the Revolution, Elizabeth Cady Stanton’s paper, saying “Minnie Gaines is not going to get justice because she doesn’t have a jury of her peers, since there are no women on the jury.”

In the end, Gaines was found not guilty by reason of insanity. That was the mildest possible sentence and she was sent to St. Elizabeth’s Hospital for the insane for nine months, where she had her baby. Eventually, a hospital supervisor contacted Gaines’ father in Fredericksburg, Virginia and invited him to take her home.

And that is the story of Minnie Gaines.

Next week on DCentric: More on “An Example for All the Land” via an interview with Kate Masur.

Wonkette on H Street

Flickr: thecourtyard

H Street NE

Wonkette reviews Smith Commons restaurant, thinks H Street is a “Mainstream Urban Oasis”, and deems it our version of an “Epcot-like recreation of Brooklyn”:

Smith Commons is a fine establishment on H Street and just because it’s not overwhelmingly cartoon-y, it doesn’t mean that the area is losing its charm. Or maybe this Gentrification Part Two of the area is exactly what this means! We do not know these things. The New York Times hasn’t written a profile of H Street NE in years, probably because they’re too afraid to venture to the Northeast quadrant, so we guess we’ll never know. Oh well. We would just like some streetcars, please. The END.

Like Paul Masson wine, there will be no gray lady profile of a “hip” D.C. nabe, before its time.

Henderson Not Budging on Hardy Middle School

Flickr: D. Clow

Councilmember Jack Evans agrees with parents in his ward who want to bring Pope back.

Candidate Vince Gray supported the reinstatement of popular former Hardy Middle School principal, Patrick Pope, who was removed by Michelle Rhee from his post in Georgetown.

Mayor Vince Gray is deferring to Interim Schools Chancellor Kaya Henderson, who has angered some powerful, vocal parents by refusing to return Pope to Hardy.

The Washington Post asserts that “Contrary to overblown reports, Hardy is not a school in chaos but one that is experiencing stresses typical to a middle school.”

But that assessment doesn’t mesh with what NBC 4′s P.J. Orvetti wrote, earlier today: “Since Pope was removed, the school has recorded 41 student suspensions — compared to just one for the entirety of last year.

Unhappy parents have recruited a surprising ally to voice their concerns. According to the Georgetown Dish,

D.C. Council Chairman Kwame Brown will hold an oversight hearing on District schools this Friday March 4 at 10:00 am in the Council Chamber. After mounting controversy at Hardy Middle School during the last year, Councilmember Jack Evans Tuesday introduced legislation to reinstate popular Principal Patrick Pope. The legislation is likely to be a topic of the hearing.

Mayor Gray has already indicated that even if the legislation passes, he won’t sign it. The Hardy Middle School saga continues.

Tasty Morning Bytes – D.C.’s Poor Get Less, Bud Bust in B’dale and Bad News for Schools

Good morning, DCentric readers! And a sunny Thursday to you. And you. But not you. We know you’d rather be in New York.

Funds for D.C.’s needy go elsewhere Money went to catering, event supplies, more: “A D.C. Council member who represents some of the city’s poorest households has spent less than 5 percent of the money she has raised since 2007 to help constituents with urgent needs, such as funeral expenses, rent and utilities, a review of campaign finance records shows.” (Washington Times)

Behind the cost of Chairman Brown’s SUVs More Kwame-gate! “Even before budget managers city-wide had to focus on tightening belts, many others who use public vehicles were able to make do at a fraction of the cost of the SUVs Brown ordered. The average cost of a D.C. public vehicle lease costs taxpayers about $430, almost 4.5 times less than Brown’s Lincolns.” (wtop.com)

“Massive” Marijuana Farm Busted In Bloomingdale “Commander Lamar D. Greene reported that an evening burglary reduction unit…noticed a back door on the unit block of Adams Street NW open and unattended. When the officers went to check it out, a man appeared and started acting jittery; when the officers investigated further, they found a huge cultivation, distribution materials and three firearms.” (DCist)

African-American lawmakers blast budget plan as step back for civil rights “…the GOP cuts threaten to bring the U.S. back to a time when “America was not in her finest hour, a time when the poor, the rural and people of color were denied equal opportunities to education, healthcare, jobs with decent wages and protections, and the possibility of homeownership. We cannot and must not go back there.” (thehill.com)

‘Severe cuts’ planned for D.C. schools Uh-oh: “D.C. schools will be forced to lay off teachers and other staff under significantly slashed budgets that officials plan to release later this week, according to members of central office staff.” (Washington Examiner )

Biddle Challenges Include Some Notable D.C. Voters Biddle disputes signatures that got competitors on ballot: ! “Biddle’s challenges included his campaign chairperson, campaign manager, campaign treasurer, former Councilmember Kathy Patterson…several sitting ANC Commissioners and other candidates. “If I didn’t take every part of the process very seriously, this would be pretty funny,” said Weaver” (DCist)

Tweet of the Day, 03.02

Not to mention that it’s very easy to cut down a new tree…and get your bike stolen:

Please. Our brand new trees on #HSt are NOT bike racks. That will harm them. We waited too long for this. Got it?
@HstreetDC
Margaret Holwill

Tasty Morning Bytes – More Metro Violence, Angels Guarding Metro and Georgia Ave Looks Ahead

Good morning, DCentric readers! Is your Wednesday feeling wacky? Escape the madness with these fresh links:

Juvenile Stabbed On Metro Bus In Southeast DC Group of riders rushed off bus before victim alerted driver: “Police are investigating a late-night stabbing of a juvenile on a Metro bus in Southeast DC…the bus driver immediately called police, and the victim was taken to George Washington Hospital where he is considered to be stable.” (WUSA Washington, DC)

Guardian Angels To Increase Patrols After Spike in Attacks at Metro Stations “John Ayala says what’s happening on D.C.’s transit system has happened before in New York City in the early 1980s. “They had bankruptcy in New York and the city was running out of money and they pulled police off the transit system and …the kids went buck wild,” said Ayala. The past seven months has seen an uptick in violent assaults on Metro trains.” (myfoxdc.com)

Georgia Ave. redevelopment tries to mix old with new Old-timers are wary: “They feel that, if you bring all this stuff in, this is going to knock out the carryouts, the beauty parlors, the barbershops and the longtime establishments that stayed there even after the riots of ’68,” he said. The redevelopment of Columbia Heights brought Target, Panda Express and Bed Bath & Beyond — but swept away many local shops, he said.” (Washington Examiner )

Southeast man convicted of luring man to death through chat line “Men who call into the anonymous chat lines, Holcomb told the detectives, were working professionals who wouldn’t report robberies for fear of disclosing their lifestyles. “You come up with a lot of money on there,” (the convicted murderer) told the detectives.” (The Washington Post)

D.C. bill to allow weddings by notary seen aiding gays Already permitted in FL, ME, SC: “Proponents say the new law builds on the law allowing same-sex unions, in part on the theory that gay couples who might not want to have a religious service or go to the courthouse would have another, more private choice.” (Washington Times)

D.C. budget projections get big boost It’s something: “The District’s budget gap for the next fiscal year, once predicted to be more than a half-billion dollars, has shrunk to $322 million thanks largely to expected growth in the city’s commercial real estate market, city officials said.” (Washington Examiner )

UDC president’s expenses questioned Pres needs leg room, flexibility to change ticket at last minute: “Sessoms’s expenses include several airfares well above market rates…”This characterization that he’s traipsing the globe with caviar and champagne is silly,” said Alan Etter, a university spokesman. “It’s false, and it’s silly.” (The Washington Post)