最新蜜桃影像

最新蜜桃影像
Alex Padro ran for D.C. Council-At-Large. 最新蜜桃影像 found his poster on Nov. 12 laying on the ground in NoMa. (Ana 脕lvarez/ 最新蜜桃影像)

Election posters: your time is up

As election season comes to an end, candidates are running out of time to clear their campaign posters from D.C. streets.

Posters opposing President Donald Trump, posters endorsing President-elect Joe Biden, posters calling out Washington D.C. residents to vote for D.C. Council candidates, and posters advocating D.C. statehood have decorated streets and houses for the past months.

Wednesday is the deadline for candidates to remove their electoral posters according to .听

鈥淢ost of ours are gone. There might be some straggler somewhere, but we鈥檝e tried to remove as many of them as possible,鈥 Chander Jayaraman, candidate for D.C. Council-At-Large, said.

In 2012, Chander Jayaraman was elected as the ANC for the Capitol Hill community. 最新蜜桃影像 found this poster in the streets of NoMa on Nov. 12; on Nov. 29, there were still other posters of the candidate in this neighborhood. (Ana 脕lvarez/ 最新蜜桃影像)

D.C. code states every candidate must remove the electoral posters they place around the city within 30 days after the election.听

鈥淎 sign, advertisement, or poster related to a specific event shall be removed no later than thirty (30) days following the event to which it is related,鈥 states the Board of Elections鈥 Guidelines for Placing and Removing Political Posters on Public Spaces in the District of Columbia.

This was Jayaraman鈥檚 first time running for a city-wide position, although he had previously run for an Advisory Neighborhood Commissioner (ANC) position. Jayaraman said that although the electoral poster rules are the same for ANC and D.C. Council, he did not 鈥減ay much attention to them鈥 at that moment.

Other rules that candidates must follow: no adhesives that are difficult to remove, posters cannot be put up on trees, and must be securely placed on a lamppost to prevent them from falling because of the weather. Jayaraman told 最新蜜桃影像 the city advised him posters could be displayed 100 days before the election.

鈥淚n August, we submitted our signatures to be placed on the ballot. And once you’re confirmed that you are an eligible candidate to be on the ballot, you get a notice,鈥 Jayaraman said. 鈥淲hen you submit your signature, they give you a list of items,鈥 Jayaraman said, 鈥渁mongst those is a flyer, a trifold flyer that tells you the rules about 鈥榩ostering鈥 and 鈥榖lack carding.鈥欌

Chander Jayaraman said that some of his poll signs placed in North East of Capitol Hill and Brookland were removed and replaced with Vincent Orange posters. 最新蜜桃影像 found this poster in NoMa on Nov. 29. (Ana 脕lvarez/ 最新蜜桃影像)

The Board of Elections does not oversee the placement and removal of posters. The District Department of Transportation oversees the process and the Department of Public Works (DPW) enforces the rules.听

最新蜜桃影像 reached out to DPW but received no reply.听 The most recent information we could find was in a 2004 elections press release.听 鈥淒PW鈥檚 SWEEP (Solid Waste Education and Enforcement Program) inspectors are responsible for issuing most of the Notices of Violation for poster infractions.鈥澨

Neighborhood removal

Jayaraman said, 鈥淚t鈥檚 always easier to just remove. Just yank 鈥榚m off.鈥 He said now that the election is over, many neighbors have taken the posters down and that some volunteers that helped him put the posters up cooperated with the removal.

Two residents of the NoMa community, interviewed by 最新蜜桃影像, said that although they do not mind the electoral posters, they think it is the candidate鈥檚 job to take them down.

鈥淭hey should do it [take the posters down.] Especially if the candidate is running to be a positive element in the city, then they should take responsibility whether or not they win,鈥 said Paul Klein, a NoMa resident

Klein thought that the posters should be taken down after the election 鈥渟ometime in late November, early December.鈥 Klein said he has a Biden poster in his home and will remove it on January 20; this is the day Biden swears in as president. Klein did not display any posters of candidates running for the D.C. council.

Most of the posters seen through the houses in the NoMa community are endorsements to Biden and vice president-elect Kamala Harris. This is not Paul Klein鈥檚 house. (Ana 脕lvarez/ 最新蜜桃影像)

 

On the other hand, Emily Jorgensen, 28, said that posters should be taken down by the end of the year. Jorgensen, who lives in an apartment complex in NoMa, said she has not taken down any posters and that it should be taken down by the candidate because 鈥渢hey are usually the ones who put them up.鈥

Jorgensen favored Ed Lazere in the D.C. Council race and Joe Biden in the presidential election, but she did not put up any candidate posters in her home.

 

Ana 脕lvarez

Ana 脕lvarez is a Puerto Rican graduate student pursuing a degree in Journalism and Public Affairs with a specialization in investigative journalism. She covers the NoMa community for 最新蜜桃影像.

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