On January 21st, 2024 Opportunity DC circulated a letter calling on lawmakers and relevant agencies to pass and implement critical public safety legislation including Secure DC. Over 100 civic and business leaders representing hundreds of DC businesses and employing thousands of District residents signed the letter.
Dear DC Councilmembers and Mayor Bowser:
We write to you as owners and leaders of businesses in the District of Columbia, but we also experience DC as residents and homeowners, taxpayers and voters, parents and neighbors, employers and customers. Through every lens, in every ward, we are concerned about safety.
DC’s crime statistics for 2023 were alarming:
- Homicide: Up 35%. Last year, more people were murdered in DC than in any year since 1997.
- Motor vehicle theft, including carjackings: Up 82%. On average, 18 cars were reported stolen every day last year.
- Robbery: Up 67%
- Total violent crime: Up 39% vs. 2022
- Total crime: Up 26% vs. 2022
Each of the 34,414 incidents reported to the Metropolitan Police Department last year – every crime – had multiple victims. In addition to those who have been assaulted, robbed, and murdered in our city, there are families, friends, neighbors, co-workers, and many others who have experienced the trauma of that crime as well. The broader community is also affected.
Following a pandemic that set our city back, crime is now undercutting DC’s welfare and capacity to revitalize our economy. We hope you feel the urgency we do. What will make DC safer? Commonsense policies, investments guided by evidence and empathy, and collaboration across District and federal agencies.
We see these principles at work in the Secure DC Omnibus legislation proposed by Councilmember Pinto, which includes major provisions of Mayor Bowser’s public safety proposals and is complemented by Chairman Mendelson’s own bill. Collectively, this legislation would increase accountability for adults and young people who commit crimes in the District of Columbia and for those individuals and offices responsible for preventing, investigating, and prosecuting them.
We call on DC’s lawmakers to pass and fund evidence-based solutions that District residents broadly support, and we call on local and federal law enforcement agencies and court systems to then implement these measures faithfully, efficiently, and in coordination.
In a survey of DC residents conducted last fall by Opportunity DC, respondents strongly endorsed more investment in law enforcement, including more police presence in neighborhoods, additional tools and resources for MPD, and reduced 911 response times. DC voters also support root-cause solutions to crime, recognizing that offenders often violate others’ safety because of insecurities in their own lives. Investments in workforce development, affordable housing, equitable food access, high-quality schools, mental health and addiction support, and productive activities for young people will help combat crime in DC long-term.
In the last 25 years, DC has experienced an exciting renaissance, thanks in no small part to pragmatic political leadership. Fueled by new businesses, new jobs, new residents, and new visitors, the District of Columbia has been able to fund groundbreaking programs in education, expand our social safety net,
build more affordable housing, invest in infrastructure and transportation, and establish a dynamic, inclusive reputation befitting of our nation’s capital.
However, a city that feels unsafe to its residents and appears unsafe to observers will repel residents, businesses, and investments. It will not be a place where people want to shop, dine, or gather. Tourists will be wary of visiting. Employers will abandon and avoid DC in favor of safer, more business-friendly markets.
We are counting on you to lead at this critical moment. Protect the District of Columbia from an existential threat to its prosperity by urgently and collaboratively addressing public safety. Pass, sign, and implement the Secure DC Omnibus in its current form.
Sincerely,
- Akridge
- Alturas Real Estate Interests
- Anacostia Organics
- Apartment & Office Building Association of Metropolitan Washington
- Atlas Brew Works
- Aurora Market
- Baja Tap
- Ben’s Chili Bowl
- Bernstein Management Corporation
- Blake Real Estate
- Borger Residential
- Bozzuto Group
- Buffalo & Bergen
- Building Bridges Across the River
- Buttercream Bakeshop
- BXP
- Cahill Advisors
- Captivate Perspectives Corporation
- Carr Companies
- Carr Properties
- Centrolina
- Club Pilates Georgetown DC
- Club Pilates Mount Vernon Triangle
- Clyde’s Restaurant Group
- Colada Shop
- Community Three
- Cork Wine Bar and Market
- DC Association of REALTORS
- DC Chamber of Commerce
- DC Nightlife Council
- DC Pie Shop
- DC Restaurant Group (801 Bar and Restaurant, The Bottom Line, Madhatter, Prost, Shaw’s Tavern, Vagabond).
- District of Columbia Building Industry Association
- Donohoe
- Dolcezza Gelato
- DW Tax Preparation LLC
- Eastern Point Collective (The Duck & The Peach, La Collina, Meli, The Wells)
- El Tamarindo
- Enlightened
- Federal City Council
- Fish and Fire Food Group (Ivy City Smokehouse, Nick’s Riverside Grill, The Point, Tony & Joe’s Seafood Place)
- FLINT, LLC
- Forge Company
- Fountain Square Beverage Concepts
- Framebridge
- Friedman Capital
- Georgetown Events (Due South, Jetties, Surfside)
- Giant Food
- Graham Holdings
- Greater Washington Black Chamber of Commerce
- Greater Washington Board of Trade
- Goulston & Storrs
- Hines
- Hoffman and Associates
- Horning Brothers Management
- Jair Lynch Real Estate Partners
- JBG Smith
- JL Restaurant Group (Hank’s Oyster Bar)
- Long Shot Hospitality (Dauphine’s, The Dubliner, The Salt Line) Miller & Long
- Monumental Sports
- MRP Realty
- Neighborhood Restaurant Group
- NoMa Business Improvement District
- NoWords.Space LLC
- Number Nine
- One Street Commercial Properties
- Opportunity DC
- Perkins Eastman
- Perry’s Restaurant
- Piccolina
- Pizza Paradiso
- The Point
- Potomac Investment Properties
- Prescription Chicken
- ProFish
- PRP Real Estate Investment
- Quadrangle
- Rebuilding Together DCA
- Restaurant Association of Metropolitan Washington
- Ris
- Roadside Development
- Savills
- Silver Diner
- SJG Properties
- The Society For Children Orphaned By AIDS Inc. (SOCOBA)
- Spectrum Management
- Sticky Fingers Sweets & Eats
- Stonebridge
- Sunnyside Restaurant Group (Good Stuff Eatery, Santa Rosa Taqueria, We The Pizza)
- Tin Shop (Astro Beer Hall, Church Hall, Franklin Hall, Penn Social, Tall Boy) Trade
- UIP Companies, INC
- Urban Atlantic
- Usource Construction
- Washingtonian Magazine
- The Wilkes Company
- Cc: Chief Pamela Smith, Metropolitan Police Department
- Attorney General Brian Schwalb
- U.S. Attorney Matthew M. Graves
- Chief Judge Anita Josey-Herring, Superior Court of the District of Columbia Robert Anthony Dixon, U.S. Marshal for the Superior Court of the District of Columbia Chief Judge James E. Boasberg, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia Leslie C. Cooper, Director, Pretrial Services Agency for the District of Columbia
- Richard S. Tischner, Director, Court Services and Offender Supervision Agency for the District of Columbia
