The Price Of Success In Clarendon
Task Force to Examine Neighbors' Concerns
Thursday, February 9, 2006; Page VA03
In response to growing concerns from Clarendon residents upset about some of the rowdy patrons who frequent the neighborhood's numerous bars, county officials have created a task force to study the issue, including whether more police officers should be assigned to the popular commercial area, officials said.
Members of the working group, who represent various county agencies, met with neighborhood civic associations last week to discuss the problems, said Roni Freeman, executive director of the Clarendon Alliance, a public-private partnership chartered by the County Board 20 years ago.
![]() Clarendon, once Arlington's downtown, has experienced a resurgence with popular shops, restaurants and bars. (By Andrea Bruce Woodall -- The Washington Post) |
Freeman attended the hour-long meeting, a quarterly session of restaurant owners and residents, and said the group expects to present its findings to county officials this spring.
Diana Sun, a county spokeswoman, said numerous recommendations are expected to be made to the County Board, including suggestions for dealing with public drunkenness, noise, litter and parking problems.
"Things have changed" in Clarendon, Freeman said. "It's a function of the neighborhood and commercial area being so integrated. . . . We're dedicated to making sure that the commercial area is kept alive, and so we want everyone talking to each other about what's going on."
Residents of the popular area have long complained about such nuisances as public urination and littering. And fights sometimes break out over the precious few parking slots.
Residents want more police enforcement, said Mark Weinress, president of the Lyon Village Citizens Association, a community that abuts the bar area. He noted one of the more bizarre incidents that played out there late last month when a group of men got into a fight shortly after leaving Mister Days, one of several popular nightspots. During the altercation, one man's ear was partially bitten off; two men were arrested.
"Mister Days has long been a problem, and now that someone's ear has been bitten off, it's evident that things need to be addressed," Weinress said, adding that the fight was one of a series of disputes fueled by alcohol.
Tiffany Lee, owner of Mister Days, said that though the incident was unfortunate, it is unfair to cast blame on her bar. She said that patrons often hop from one bar to another and that the circumstances surrounding those involved in the ear-biting incident and their time at Mister Days was unclear. Still, she said she and her partner would welcome a stronger police presence.
"Our position is that the area is booming, and real estate property values have increased partly because of businesses like ours and the entertainment district we've helped build up," she said. "We're paying a lot in taxes, but it's not being redistributed into the area the way we wish it would. Over the years, as this area has grown, the police presence hasn't. We'd like to see the government reallocate the money so that more officers are directed here."
Mister Days provides parking for its customers on weekends. A parking lot across the street is available for patrons as well, Lee said. And the bar has a contract with Clarendon House, a rehabilitation program for people with mental illness, to pick up trash on Friday, Saturday and Sunday mornings.
Still, Weinress said he and his neighbors regularly have to clean up bar patrons' trash, including broken beer bottles left scattered on sidewalks and in yards.



