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Jonetta Rose Barras: Lawsuit time in D.C.

By: Jonetta Rose Barras
Examiner Columnist
August 6, 2009

What's there to investigate about the fire that destroyed the home of former D.C. Board of Education President Peggy Cooper Cafritz on Chain Bridge Road? Either fire hydrants worked or they didn't. Either the water pressure was adequate or it wasn't. It's just that simple. But the D.C. Water and Sewer Authority and fire department are doing the butt-covering dance.

"We have already begun a thorough and transparent review of the performance of the distribution system [and] expect this comprehensive review will be completed within days," Johnnie Hemphill Jr., chief of staff to WASA's interim general manager, wrote on July 30 in response to concerns raised by D.C. Councilwoman Mary Cheh.

Her questions weren't complicated. She asked, for example, how WASA determines the amount of water pressure to maintain in a particular area; do fire trucks carry their own water in case of malfunctioning fire hydrants; and are firefighters informed of which hydrants near a fire are operational.

"It will take a period of time to determine what occurred and what long-term solutions are necessary to avoid future water supply problems," Fire Chief Dennis Rubin replied.

"I'm sort of disgusted," Cheh told me this week. She's waiting for Mayor Adrian M. Fenty to provide answers as promised.

It's not as if these problems of faulty fire hydrants and inadequate water pressure are new. They were cited as complications in the Georgetown Library fire two years ago. After that incident, WASA and fire officials were called before the council. There were investigations, promises of a survey of hydrants and a plan for repairs.

"What the hell has been going on for the last two years?" Cheh asked.

Before the fire, residents of the Chain Bridge Road area complained about water pressure; they were ignored. These are some of the people that Ward 1 Councilman Jim Graham has been champing at the bit to tax. Upper-income District residents catch hell: They're accused of not carrying their load, although they pay an enormous amount of taxes. They make no demands for services. And yet, when they need their government, it fails them every time.

When former New York Times reporter David Rosenbaum was attacked, the Metropolitan Police, the city's emergency medical system and Howard University all failed him. He died on a gurney in the emergency room. Last week, Cafritz's life's work, personal belongings and memories went up in flames because WASA ignored residents' concerns and the fire department didn't know the status of equipment it uses to perform its job.

"Sometimes a tragedy is what provokes action," said Cheh, remembering that Rosenbaum's family agreed not to file a lawsuit if the city reformed the emergency medical system. "[That} did lead to real and material changes."

So, raise your hand if you agree with me: Cafritz and other Chain Bridge Road residents should sue WASA and the District government.

Jonetta Rose Barras, host of WPFW's "D.C. Politics With Jonetta," can be reached at rosebook1@aol.com.



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Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

Aug 6, 2009

I agree they should sue but I'm disappointed that this is the case she chose to point out a law suit. What about the average income citizens that have been vicims of the government. Water pressure problems are not new "all" over the city and there have been fires that destroyed homes "all" over the city. Where was the commentary to champion those DC residents?

 

DB

Aug 6, 2009

i'm a moderate-income DC resident ($52k) and i rarely ask for city services, and they usually fail me, too. Being let down isn't about money. It's about our work ethic thinking everything is "not that serious."

i will say i think Ms. Barras is horrified by those other incidents as well. Listening to her radio program makes her displeasure with tragic letdowns very clear.

 

I'm embarrassed

Aug 6, 2009

DCFEMS assumed the responsibility is assuring that the hydrants were functional, however that was done simply by opening the hydrant and watching the flow of water. Many manpower hours and tax dollars were put into this detail and what little information was gathered, was never incorporated into the agency fire operations, as demonstrated by the Chain Bridge fire. No one can argue the that water pressure may have been a factor, but well trained fire departments have contingency plans for such occurrences. Chief Rubin and the fire department should not be allowed to shift the burden and no amount of "double speak" should be accepted. The taxpayer will have to pay dearly for the incompetence of these "professionals" and the obstruction of the Mayor and his side kicks. Sad.

 

Terry Miller

Aug 6, 2009

Maybe Fenty should settle this one the way he settled the Rosenbaum case? Let Peggy Cooper set up a Fire Committee to come up a plan on how to prevent future events like this. First step in the plan: get ride of the Chief and all his current senior staff.

 

Not surprising

Aug 6, 2009

DCFEMS needs to modernize its operation. 100 years of tradition untouched by progress.

 

What will happen to us?

Aug 27, 2009

The word "Gentrification" came up one day on my journey to class at UDC. I noticed when riding the Red Line pass the UDC stop, You may only see 3 African-Americans out of 60 Caucasians. Why is this so? Who can answer this? As I board the X2 Bus along the H Street N.E. corridor, sometimes a quarter of the bus is caucausian. Just 3 years ago, it was completely African-American. I have numerous concerns when it comes to gentrification. I don't understand where the fairness is being justified. Just years ago I learned the definition of reparations. I also learned that my mom didnt know the American way-teaching her that they should children,go to school, find a career that fits their interest, get married before having children, maintain good credit, buy a house and pay your bills on time. I, also found that a lot of African-American parents didn't teach their children this so it leaves us at the bottom of the barrel. It leaves me struggling to get my kids to understand these things.

 


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