Today's Washington Business Journal (which as of this week is now holding
all of their print content behind a subscription wall for 30 days) reports that the
William C. Smith company--which has on the boards a number of projects on Near Southeast--is working to organize a Business Improvement District (BID) that would stretch from
Maritime Plaza (east of the 11th Street Bridges) to just over
South Capitol Street into Buzzards Point. The plan is being run by Michael Stevens, the former head of the city's marketing center.
Forest City Washington (developers of the
Southeast Federal Center,
Capper/Carrollsburg, and the
WASA/SFC portions of the
Ballpark District) are quoted as being enthusiastic. Fifty-one percent of property owners within the zone would need to agree to a property tax increase to fund the BID, then the council would need to approve it. As for what exactly a BID would do, the article says: "At first ... making sure the area is clean, safe and friendly. That means a litter patrol, graffiti removal, and public relations. As the neighborhood matures, the BID's role would likely expand to tracking economic development in the area." (Yeah, if only someone were doing that now!)