Questions remain about MPD’s work with ICE. Activists want lawmakers to step in
They say the D.C. Council should publicly question MPD about cooperation on immigration enforcement.
Plus, ticket relief for low-income drivers, why restaurant workers unionize, and more.
Hey there,
Yesterday, Jeff Bezos announced that The Post's opinion pages will no longer publish a diversity of thought. Instead, he's directed them to shill exclusively for two conservative idols: personal liberties and free markets.
The section's editor, David Shipley, resigned saying he didn't know what the future of the section held. Economics reporter Jeff Stein put it more bluntly: the new policy makes it clear that "dissenting views will not be published or tolerated.”
Fortuitously, we too have an announcement: We're ramping up our opinion section! And we believe that diverse perspectives are good, actually.
We won't pretend we can fill the gap left by the Post (at least not yet!). We are, after all, still six people all working part-time to make this newsroom happen (help us do it full-time?). But we are committed to publishing voices that are shut out of what Jeff probably calls “the marketplace of ideas,” and those that speak to The 51st’s guiding editorial belief: the District should be a more just and equitable place to live for everyone who calls it home. (In this newsroom, we're of D.C., for D.C.)
This week, we have an opinion piece about working conditions in the restaurant industry written by two workers at St. Anselm, which voted to unionize last week. (You can also read our last opinion piece on former Capital Pride board member Vince Micone's turn to DEI-decimating Trump appointee).
We also have story on a new pilot program to adjust traffic tickets based on income, a fact-check of the BOWSER bill, a round up of local resources for laid-off federal workers, and a dispatch from D.C.'s new Ghanaian restaurant. And, because everything sucks, we rounded up some fun plans for your weekend.
– Abigail Higgins

Last fall, 51st contributor Martin Austermuhle got the dreaded envelope in the mail from the D.C. Department of Motor Vehicles. He didn’t even have to open it to know what it was: a ticket from one of the city’s many traffic cameras. For getting caught going 36 in a 25 mph zone (an anomaly – he's a great driver, he swears!), he had to cough up $100.
For him, it wasn't going to break the bank, but for someone else it might have, especially in a city with a dramatic racial wealth gap. In an attempt to address the disparity, the city is piloting a new program offering low-income drivers a 50 percent discount on the fines.

The toxic nature of restaurant industry work has grabbed headlines in recent years. Among them: food service workers seeing some of the highest death rates of the COVID-19 pandemic; celebrity chefs facing abuse allegations; even the hit TV show The Bear showcased the brutal nature of restaurant workplaces. Two St. Anselm workers, who successfully voted to unionize with UNITE HERE Local 25 last week, wrote about why they believe unions are the answer to their own toxic working conditions, and that of D.C.'s restaurant industry as a whole. (Spanish translation here)

What happens when a DEI-plane-crash truther and an ex-Never-Trumper-turned-MAGA-sycophant try their hand at writing legislation? The BOWSER Act (sick burn, I guess?), 11 lines of text occupying less than a single page that aim to abolish home rule and take over D.C. You'll be shocked to learn it's slim on facts (or words at all?) and heavy on the same bloated, tired, and baseless assumptions about the city conservatives have been making for years.


Thousands of federal employees have lost their jobs thanks to co-Presidents Trump and Elon. In response, many local businesses and individuals are offering support and relief. We've rounded up some deals and created a live spreadsheet for readers to submit more resources. Plus, we're joining in by offering a free year of membership to The 51st for impacted workers.

Afrobeats, highlife, and jollof duck pots are the newest addition to the U Street corridor area thanks to celebrity chef Eric Adjepong (of Top Chef fame) and his new contemporary Ghanaian restaurant. 51st contributor Cornelia Poku visits the West African joint, and with it the sounds and tastes of her childhood.

This weekend you can revel in an anti-eviction canvas, a glitter dance party, and boobs (for a good cause), making it clear that, through it all, D.C. hasn't lost its shine.
Did you hear? Overheards are back. So get to snooping this weekend, and send us your juiciest, most entertaining tidbits at overheards@51st.news.


You are probably still processing the news that the D.C. institution, E Street Cinema, will close its curtains in March. We're devastated too. But memory is the heart's way of keeping a thing alive once its physical form leaves us. So in that spirit, we're collecting special E Street moments. From the profound (first date with your spouse?) to the mundane (solo-dates with yourself and a tall soda?), let us know what memories you'll carry with you long after the credits at E Street have stopped rolling.
We'd love to hear from you. Submit your thoughts here.

Here's more news you may have missed this week:
You’ll find this handy guide to public meetings at the bottom of every edition of The 51st. We’ll refine and improve along the way, so if you think we’re missing resources, please let us know!
| Council of the District of Columbia |
|---|
| 📅 All DC Council Meetings 🛠️ Sign up to testify |
| Advisory Neighborhood Commissions |
| 📅 All ANC Events 🛠️ Look up your ANC |
| DC State Board of Education |
| 📅 All DCBOE Events 🛠️ Sign up to testify |
| Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority |
| 📅 All WMATA Board Meetings 🛠️ Public Comment Procedures |
| Metropolitan Police Department Authority |
| 📅 Discussions by district 🛠️ Look up your police service area |
| DC Interagency Council on Homelessness Authority |
| 📅 All ICH Meetings 🛠️ Working groups: email ich.dmhhs@dc.gov |
| DC Housing Authority |
| 📅 2025 DCHA Board Meetings 🛠️ Sign up to speak + 🛠️Watch |
| All of the mayor’s Open Meetings |
| 📅 Commissions and boards and committees, oh my! |
| City Service Hotlines |
| Police, Fire, EMS: 911 Non-Emergency: 311 Mental Health: 888-793-4357 Shelter Access: 202-399-7093 |
That's everything! See you next week.
– Abigail
With your help, we pursue stories that hold leaders to account, demystify opaque city and civic processes, and celebrate the idiosyncrasies that make us proud to call D.C. home. Put simply, our mission is to make it easier — and more fun — to live in the District. Our members help keep local news free and independent for all: