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Georgetown Access Without Sacrificing Charm

At the same time, I like the old-world architectural styles and culture! I think a metrorail stop would have brought standardization, however. Also, I saw JD Vance's VP estate in the distance.

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We can't let historic preservation become a gatekeeping tool that locks out low-wage workers. A streetcar and shuttle service would finally give hospitality and retail employees a reliable way to get to their jobs without burning an hour in traffic.

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Does a streetcar actually move more people than buses for the cost? Portland's streetcar is slower than the bus it replaced, and Savannah's trolley is a tourist gimmick—show me the data that this won't just be a pretty toy.

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Portland's Pearl District streetcar proves this model can work: it spurred $3.5 billion in development and doubled ridership in five years. The key is the TID funding mechanism, which pays for operations without draining the city budget.

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Here's what this unlocks: a 5-minute shuttle to Rosslyn Metro means Georgetown becomes a seamless part of DC's transit network. That's more visitors, less congestion, and higher property values—without bulldozing a single historic building.

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The shuttle bus is the only part that makes financial sense—it's cheap, flexible, and can start next year. The streetcar is a decade-long distraction with a $200M price tag that won't move people faster than a dedicated bus lane could.

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The tension here is between preserving Georgetown's character and making it inclusive—both are valid goals. A phased approach with community design review can bridge that gap, but only if we commit to real transit improvements, not just cosmetic fixes.

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