最新蜜桃影像

最新蜜桃影像
Mural inside the Safe Commercial Corridor Hub in Chinatown (Luisa Clausen)

Chinatown leaders push for expanded drug free zones

While police note the tools are no cure-all, residents say the neighborhood feels safer than it did two years ago.

Chinatown community leaders are urging city officials to expand the use of drug free zones in the area and boost visibility for the Safe Commercial Hub, a D.C.-run service center launched last year.

While they acknowledge that crime in the neighborhood is down from previous highs, leaders say these initiatives help project a sense of safety and stability to neighborhood residents.

At an Advisory Neighborhood Commission 2C , 2C04 Commissioner Jim Swart said he reached out to Commander Colin Hall of the Metropolitan Police Department鈥檚 First District to ask for more frequent use of the drug free zones because he has seen them have positive impact in the area.

鈥淚t鈥檚 been an important piece of the crime reduction puzzle,鈥 Hall said at the meeting. 鈥淚 wish we could extend it.鈥

Over the past year and a half, D.C. officials have been leaning on a combination of initiatives to reshape Chinatown鈥檚 sense of security.

Mayor Muriel Bowser opened the Safe Commercial Corridor Hub in 2024 to connect residents to a range of services, with a focus to keep the neighborhoods clean and safe.

Bowser also reimplemented the drug free zones. The zones were created under the 1996 to allow police to order groups in designated areas suspected of drug-related activity to disperse for up to 120 consecutive hours.

In 2014, the D.C. Council the legislation, but in 2024 Bowser reinstated drug free zones with the goal to 鈥渋nterrupt activities and allow neighborhoods to clean up and reclaim public space.鈥

Howard Marks, a Chinatown resident since 2014, said it was the right choice and said he would like to see it implemented more often.

鈥淛ust by putting the orange posters, drug dealers avoid the area,鈥 Marks said, referring to the posters used to announce the drug free zones. 鈥淚t鈥檚 amazing, it created a new atmosphere.鈥

Neighborhoods under drug free zones see this flyer around the area. (Source: MPD website)

Marks, the vice president of the Gallery Place Condominium, which manages the residential portion of the mixed-use building at 777 7th Street NW, said he would like to see more drug free zones implemented around the Capital One Arena area.

Capt. Paul Hrebenak of the Metropolitan Police Department鈥檚 First District said the enforcement tool must be backed up by data showing high levels of drug or violent crimes in the neighborhood.

Chinatown has seen a decrease in crime and increase in security since the pandemic, according to Hrebenak, who said the achievement is due to a combination of several efforts.

In August, President Donald Trump declared the Metropolitan Police Department under “direct federal control,” an order that lasted for 30 days. Hrebenak said local law enforcement in Chinatown remained consistent during the takeover and prioritized transparency with the residents in the area.

鈥淚 can definitely understand that there鈥檚 been a shift, perhaps, as this takeover has happened, with the community trust in law enforcement,鈥 Hrebenak said. 鈥淏ut in the medium term, things haven鈥檛 changed that much in our neighborhood-to-neighborhood response with MPD.鈥

Hrebenak said moving forward, MPD鈥檚 goal is to continue to improve the safety in the Chinatown area, but drug free zones are not the only focus.

He said the tactic is not a 鈥渟ilver bullet,鈥 but the zones give officers a legal way to curb loitering tied to drug use and sales.

The Safe Commercial Corridor Hubs sits at 675 H St. NW. (Luisa Clausen)
The Safe Commercial Corridor Hubs sits at 675 H St. NW. (Luisa Clausen)

鈥淣o drug free zone is going to magically make an area not have drugs anymore,鈥 Hrebenak said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not like we slap a drug free zone on a certain area and expect it to be all, end all. It鈥檚 a small part of a larger initiative to help some of these areas.鈥

John Kwon, manager of Chinatown Liquor Beer & Wine, has worked at the store on 602 H St. NW for the past 10 years.

Kwon said he鈥檚 watched the negative impact of the pandemic on the Chinatown area and the said the drug free zones and the Safe Commercial Corridor Hub have played a role in improving the area.

鈥淭he drug free zones help so much, and I would definitely like to see it implemented more often,鈥 Kwon said. 鈥淏ut homeless is my biggest concern about safety.鈥

First District Officer Majohn Williams is stationed at the Safe Commercial Corridor Hub at 675 H St. NW.

Williams started working at the hub when it first open. For the past year and a half, she said she has seen violence in the area decrease alongside the calls for service. Williams echoed Kwon鈥檚 concern and said though safety has been improving, homelessness continues to be an issue in the area.

In addition, Williams said a lot of people in the Chinatown community don鈥檛 know about the hub.

鈥淪ome people may walk past it and not know what it is,鈥 Williams said. 鈥淚 do feel like it needs more advertisement, so the center is able to help more than what we鈥檝e been helping.鈥

Marks raised the same concern during the September ANC meeting. He said the hub can鈥檛 be an effective tool for the community鈥檚 safety if it鈥檚 hidden. Marks encouraged the

Safe Commercial Corridor Hub offers services from different city agencies. After being open for over a year, some think it still needs more advertising. (Luisa Clausen)
Safe Commercial Corridor Hub offers services from different city agencies. After being open for over a year, some think it still needs more advertising. (Luisa Clausen)

city to improve the signs in front of the hub to help people understand its role better.

最新蜜桃影像 reached out to the mayor鈥檚 office and ANC 2C commissioner Thomas Lee but did not receive responses to questions in time for publication.

Councilmember Brooke Pinto (D-Ward 2) said she has worked with Chinatown residents and stakeholders on ways to support and enhance public safety. Pinto is the chairperson of the committee on the Judiciary and Public Safety, which is responsible for public safety issues including law enforcement, law enforcement oversight and also violence reduction in the city.

“Drug free zones are a critical tool for our local police to identify and address hotspots of crime activity to allow communities to reclaim public space,” Pinto said.

Hrebenak said while data can help the city and Chinatown residents have an idea of the bigger picture, the real measure of progress is how people experience the neighborhood.

鈥淚 think over the last few years, we鈥檝e really seen the shift that鈥檚 been through investments like the Safe Commercial Corridor Hub and the Drug-Free Zones,鈥 Hrebenak said. 鈥淏ut also we鈥檝e made a conscious decision to make sure we have police resources in the area and we can ask people 鈥楬ow do you feel walking to work?鈥 鈥楬ow do you feel living in Chinatown now?鈥 and there鈥檚 a huge difference from two years ago.鈥

Luisa Clausen

Clausen is a journalist and graduate student in the Public Affairs and International Journalism program at American University in Washington, D.C. She was born and raised in Brazil and moved to the United States at 19 to study journalism at Oklahoma State University.
She served as the editor-in-chief for The O鈥機olly, OSU's newspaper, for a year. In 2024, she interned for the Tulsa World and for KOSU, NPR鈥檚 affiliate.
At 最新蜜桃影像, she covers Chinatown and Penn Quarter, as well as the U.S. Congress.

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