Monthly Archives: May 2010

Dixie Liquors Keeps Singles Ban Exemption Despite Strongly Worded ANC Resolution

Photo by Pedestrian Typography.

As discussed here, last month the ANC held a special session to address Dixie Liquors’s request for an exemption to the single sales ban. The emergency meeting was necessary because ABRA already had granted Dixie’s request for an exemption and so the ANC was asking for ABRA to reconsider its decision.

The original decision by ABRA to grant the exemption was based, in part, on the fact that the ANC failed to weigh in against Dixie’s original application for waiver. The ANC didn’t pass a resolution against the application on the mistaken belief that no exemption would be granted without an affirmative resolution by the ANC.

Given this miscommunication, it’s somewhat understandable that the ANC would adopt a strongly worded resolution objecting to the issuance of the waiver without a positive resolution (as well as the lack of effective notice from ABRA that it was about to grant the waiver). But the actual resolution goes way overboard: Continue reading

6 Comments

Filed under ABRA, ANC

The Morning Metropolitan

Exorcist Steps by M.V. Jantzen.

Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:

Share

1 Comment

Filed under The Morning Metropolitan

The Georgetown Metropolis

3000 block of Cambridge La.

Share

2 Comments

Filed under The Georgetown Metropolis

Apple Store May Open Mid June

Last week, GM reported a rumor that the Apple Store was coming along pretty well and that it could even meet the original May opening. It turns out that was a little optimistic.

GM heard from a tipster that those people hired to work the store will be receiving training for the first two weeks of June. There’s no guarantee that the store will open up the third week of June, but it sure looks like that’s the plan.

Share

1 Comment

Filed under Retail

The Morning Metropolitan

Photo by Gartmann.

Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:

Share

Leave a comment

Filed under The Morning Metropolitan

The Georgetown Metropolis

3000 block of R St.

Share

Leave a comment

Filed under The Georgetown Metropolis

Tree Week: Notable Georgetown Trees

To wrap up Tree Week here at the Georgetown Metropolitan, GM thought he’d highlight some special trees we have around the village.

The P St. Redwoods:

As detailed in a recent CAG newsletter, there are a group of four Chinese dawn redwoods in the backyard of P St. resident Sofia Owen, who planted the trees in the 1960s. Right now the trees are 110 feet tall and are 30 1/2 inches in diameter. In a few thousand years they could be up to 400 feet tall. Would that violate the height act? You’ll just have to live a few dozen centuries to find out… Continue reading

1 Comment

Filed under Tree Week

The Morning Metropolitan

Photo by Jay[n].

Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:

Share

Leave a comment

Filed under The Morning Metropolitan

The Georgetown Metropolis

3200 block of R St.

Share

Leave a comment

Filed under The Georgetown Metropolis

Tree Week: The Don’ts

Yesterday GM went over all the things you ought to be doing to help out our street trees. Today he’ll take up the slightly less pleasant task of going over all the things people do that they really ought not to.

#1 – Don’t Plant Anything in Tree Boxes Except Trees

Only one living thing should be planted in a tree box, and that’s a tree. This is a controversial point, since people love to plant everything from ivy to annuals to full blown bushes in their tree boxes. But these other plants take water and nutrients away from the tree, particularly young trees who are the most vulnerable.

And the problem can’t necessarily be obviated by simply watering more. In fact, that’s another problem with planting plants like annuals in a tree box. Annuals require a lot of water to survive, a lot more than a tree needs. When you water the annuals enough to keep them alive, you’re probably over-watering the tree.

Once you have a fully mature tree, it is probably less harmful to plant a few plants in the tree box. But really, a tree box is the most healthy when all that you see is thick healthy roots.

#2 – Don’t Use an Illegal Fence

District law has very specific requirements for tree box fences. They must be 18″ tall to prevent tripping. They must allow water to pass under them in order to increase the amount of rainwater being absorbed by the ground not the storm drain. Finally, they must be three sided and set back at least a foot from the edge of the curb.

While boxes like the one at the top of this post are pretty, they’re not permissible. The stones are too low and rainwater will just run around the box. Here are a couple other bad fences or borders on the exact same block: Continue reading

11 Comments

Filed under Tree Week