Amazing: D.C. Ward 5 homeless shelter site has strip club nearby, but no groceries

The site of the proposed shelter in Ward 5's is part of D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser's $22-million-a-year plan to close the homeless facility at the D.C. General Hospital. (Ryan M. McDermott/ The Washington Times)
On a dead-end street in an industrial block in Northeast Washington, fences tangled with razor wire abut the abandoned warehouse where city officials want to house as many as 50 homeless families by 2018. Nearby amenities include a Metro bus maintenance yard, two nightclubs, a strip club, several towing companies and a waste transfer station. “There is no grocery store, there is only one bus line close by, and the nearest Metro stop is a 45-minute walk,” said Rhys Gerholdt, an area resident who has been organizing opposition to the planned homeless shelter. “Mayor [Muriel] Bowser stresses that these new homeless shelters will be dignified and in residential settings, but this Ward 5 location is neither.” The site of the proposed shelter, at 2266 25th Place NE in Ward 5’s Langdon neighborhood, is part of a $22-million-a-year initiative developed by Ms. Bowser to close the decrepit 285-room homeless facility at the former D.C. General Hospital in Southeast and transfer families into new shelters in all eight wards. “These facilities will be modern, safe and dignified,” Ms. Bowser said in announcing the plan last month. Yet the Bowser administration has encountered resistance to and criticism of the plan, which has been presented to residents as a fait accompli without any public input or information about how the sites were chosen and why. The Washington Times will examine each of the proposed sites. Sources: http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2016/mar/7/dc-ward-5-homeless-shelter-site-has-strip-club-nea/

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