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Many Trees Do Not Grow in Brookland

Some can remember when trees grew fully and lined 12th Street in Brookland.
Some can remember when trees grew fully and lined 12th Street in Brookland. (Photos Courtesy Of Jeff Wilson)
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That is six to 10 times the cost of stringing it all above ground, according to Pepco.

Hainey, the Pepco spokesman, said the company has not taken a position in the Brookland case because it is an issue of aesthetics.

"If this is what they want, then they've got to figure out a way to pay for it," he said.

On the eastern edge of Catholic University, Brookland is a place of rolling hills, wraparound porches and crickets chirping in the early evening. Some Victorians and bungalows in the neighborhood have sunflowers growing in the front yard and stalks of corn out back, imparting the ambiance of a small town in the Shenandoah Valley.

"When my family moved here in 1958, one impression I had driving up 12th Street was there was this canopy of trees all the way up to the Newton theater, which is now a CVS," said Deborah Ambers, who lives in her childhood home at 13th and Newton streets. "I know it existed. It's not a dream."

Where residents like Ambers envision restoring 12th Street to a bustling strip of boutiques and cafes, today it is dotted with vacant storefronts. The disfigured trees and lack of shade make it even more forbidding on a hot summer day.

"It is unbearable out here on 12th Street," Wilson said. "What is supposed to happen is the trees are supposed to complete the ceiling of our urban room."

Don Padou, an advisory neighborhood commissioner, said he has had several meetings with the city's Department of Transportation over the past several years to discuss the issue of converting the lines. Residents said they fear time is slipping away from them, as the city has started ripping up the street for the streetscape project.

District Department of Transportation spokeswoman Karyn LeBlanc said the $10.5 million available can only be used for streetscaping purposes -- upgrading the sidewalks, curbs, streetlamps and other infrastructure. "We don't bury electrical wires," she said.

But council member Harry Thomas Jr. (D-Ward 5) said he knows of nothing that would prohibit the agency from using the streetscape money for exactly that.

"I think DDOT is wrong," he said. "I believe the money should be used for that."

The neighborhood has also gotten support from Casey Trees, which is building a new headquarters at 12th and Irving streets. The nonprofit group's mission is to restore, protect and enhance the District's tree canopy.

Wilson said his neighbors will keep fighting to put lines underground.

"If this doesn't happen now," he said, "we're not going to realize our vision for 12th Street in our lifetime."


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