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Ward 1 Update: For our kids and their kids

Councilmember Brianne Nadeau and others wearing blue #DCBottleBillNow t-shirts on a boat tour of the Anacostia

WARD 1 UPDATE

Hello Neighbors:

After more than a year of research, conversations with local distributers and retailers as well as residents, advocates, and students, followed by planning and drafting, the Council took its first formal action this week on DC’s bottle bill. I introduced this major environmental legislation to drastically reduce litter in our streets, parks, and rivers by placing a refundable 10-cent deposit on beverage containers sold in the District. 

It was a busy week leading up to a hearing in the Committee on Business and Economic Development. On Tuesday, I  took reporters and environmental advocates out on the water – what better way to illustrate what’s at stake for D.C. than boating along the Anacostia and seeing the damage that’s been done? You can see the coverage on WUSA9, Fox5, DC News Now, and ABC7, and read more in the Washington Post

On Wednesday, more than 200 people testified, many in support and others offering constructive feedback. The Committee on Transportation and the Environment will take up the bill in the coming weeks before sending it to the full Council. With 10 other councilmembers co-introducing my bill, I’m pushing back against the expected misinformation coming out of the beverage industry.    

Bottom line: the bottle bill is really simple. Retailers collect a 10-cent deposit from consumers on every beverage container – excluding dairy, infant formula, or medications. Customers return their containers and get their 10-cent deposit back. 

They can take their containers to a reverse vending machine, at a grocery store for example.   

Or they can take them to a redemption center.  

The program, which would be managed by a nonprofit funded and operated by beverage distributors, would be overseen and enforced by the Department of Energy and the Environment. 

The win for residents is a no-brainer: less trash on our streets, in our neighborhoods, and in our rivers. Experience from other states with deposit return laws shows that these laws have reduced container litter by up to 84 percent. 

The District’s bottle bill is projected to increase recycling rates by more than three times and cut the number of containers that end up in the incinerator, landfill, or the environment by five times.  

The industry has never been able to prove that a bottle bill has increased beverage prices in any state in the more than 20 years these laws have been in place. And they are unfortunately sharing misinformation about the costs to retailers. In fact, the smallest retailers are exempt from nearly all the requirements, and small distributors, like D.C.’s incredible local brewers, are exempt from many of the requirements and costs.  

You can read my full remarks from Wednesday’s hearing.  

I couldn’t be prouder to have introduced this bill to protect our environment for our kids and their kids. Stay tuned for further updates as it advances through the legislative process.  

Brianne's signature


COUNCIL UPDATES

Protecting human rights

Nominees to the Commission on Human Rights Mr. Sim Singh Attariwala Director of the Anti-Hate Program for Asian Americans Advancing Justice  Ms. Alexis Gardner Assistant Federal Public Defender in D.C.  Ms. Carmen Moreno Sanz Spanish educator at Winston Churchill High School  Mr. Sean Norman President of the DC Association of the Deaf   Ms. Jasminlee Scott  Community Support Worker at the Healthy Place  Ms. Isabelle Vladoiu Founder of the US Institute of Diplomacy and Human Rights

Now more than ever, the work of protecting human rights is the District is absolutely critical. Last week I chaired a roundtable to consider nominees for the Commission on Human Rights. The Commission ensures that every DC resident can live and work free from discrimination.

It’s not an easy task to serve on the Commission, but it’s incredibly important. These nominees bring diverse experience in promoting inclusion, and a deep belief that access to justice is a fundamental right for everyone.


Enhancing traffic safety

Traffic safety is public safety and repeat dangerous drivers threaten us all. The STEER Act, which I introduced with Councilmember Charles Allen, allows us to hold the most egregious offenders accountable, even if they live outside DC. Thank you Councilmember Allen and Attorney General Brian Schwalb for your leadership.

screenshot of DC Attorney General Brian Schwalb bluesky post: NEW: We won our first court judgment against a dangerous out-of-state driver under the STEER Act.  The Court ordered Ayanna Khalya Wilson to pay $77,100 for over 200 dangerous driving violations.  We also filed 12 new lawsuits against Maryland and Virginia drivers with nearly 2,000 traffic offenses.

Reducing river pollution

Widespread pollution of the Anacostia River threatens the health of the communities living along its banks and prevents residents from enjoying its benefits. Now, Washington Gas will take new measures to stop ongoing pollution of the Anacostia River thanks to a new settlement with the District. Thank you, Attorney General Schwalb, for taking this important step to protect our waterways and improve quality of life in our city.

Update on Empower ride-hailing

Screenshot of Washington Post article - threatened with jail CEO agrees to shut down ride-hailing app in DC

For months, the ride-hailing company Empower has refused to comply with numerous laws and regulations that protect the safety and security of consumers. I’ve been pushing on this for months and as chair of the Committee on Public Works & Operations, I’ve been in the process of investigating them. It was unsafe – they need to abide the same rules as everyone else and repeatedly refused to do that. Now, the courts have taken the action necessary to keep people safe and to hold companies accountable that think they can play by their own rules.


BRIANNE IN WARD 1

Councilmember Brianne K Nadeau on a boat on the Anacostia River with Trey Sherard, the Anacostia Riverkeeper
Councilmember Brianne K Nadeau about to ride the escalator at Navy Yard Metro Station
View of Frederick Douglass Memorial Bridge from a bike

During DC Week Without Driving sponsored by the Greater Greater Washington Transportation Equity Network, I commuted via bike as usual. But I also biked to Anacostia for the first time! The ride over the bridge was beautiful! And I commuted via boat! There are so many ways to get around our city, and I’m committed to improving public transportation access and options for everyone.


Several women, including Councilmember Nadeau, seated in chairs doing leg raise exercises
Several people pose for a photo with Councilmember Nadeau, who is holding a lime green drawstring bag

I was happy to join the Department of Aging and Community Living’s Fall Prevention Awareness Week that offered health screenings, demonstrations on home safety and fall recovery, and simple exercises that lower fall risk. Special shoutout to the Safe at Home team that provide in-home assistance to reduce the risk of falls.


I’m grateful to have joined the HIPS Recovery Event – a day dedicated to growth, healing, and resilience. I’m glad to be a champion of this important work to advance health rights and dignity, and to have a chance to celebrate the many paths of recovery.


COMMUNITY UPDATES

Get your Covid vaccine without a prescription 

The Council approved an emergency measure allowing pharmacists in D.C. to administer Covid vaccines without prescriptions. Look for online appointments or visit your local pharmacy for information about vaccine availability.  


Support #HeightsNight

Heights Night flyer

Every Tuesday in October is #HeightsNight, a time for neighbors to dine out, takeout, and shop local. The neighborhood is coming together to support small businesses in Columbia Heights, which have been hit hard by the federal takeover.  


Compensation negotiation workshop for female returning citizens 

The Mayor’s Office on Women’s Policy and Initiatives invites women returning citizens to a skills building workshop on October 8 at Benning Library on how to effectively advocate for fair pay and benefits. 

Details and RSVP 


CALENDAR

Council Legislative Meeting
Tuesday, October 7, 12 pm | online and in-person

Advisory Neighborhood Commission 1C
Wednesday, October 8, 7 pm | online

Council offices closed in observance of Indigenous Peoples’ Day
Monday, October 13

Advisory Neighborhood Commission 1A
Wednesday, October 15, 7 pm | online

Advisory Neighborhood Commission 1B
Thursday, October 9, 6:30 pm | online and in-person

Advisory Neighborhood Commission 1D
Tuesday, October 21, 7 pm | online and in-person

Advisory Neighborhood Commission 1E
Wednesday, October 22, 7 pm | online 


IN THE NEWS

WUSA
DC considers a 10-cent deposit on beverage containers to incentivize recycling

FOX5
DC council considers bottle deposit bill to fight river pollution

DC NEWS NOW
Public set to weigh in on DC’s proposed ‘bottle bill’

WASHINGTON POST
Fight gearing up over D.C. bill to recycle bottles and cans for cash

WJLA
DC bill proposes reverse vending machines that pay for bottles to cut down on pollution

WAMU
The D.C. Council passed a last-minute change to tenants rights laws. Some lawmakers are rethinking their vote

STREET SENSE
RENTAL Act passes D.C. Council amid dissent from housing, tenant rights advocates

WASHINGTON POST
Threatened with jail, CEO agrees to shut down ride-hailing app in D.C.

WASHINGTON INFORMER
Washington Gas Ordered to Contain Ongoing Pollution of Anacostia River


CONTACT US

Brianne K. Nadeau | Councilmember | [email protected]

Ariel Ardura | Committee Director | [email protected]

Abigail Boshart | Legislative Aide | [email protected]

Amanda Chulick | Legislative Analyst | [email protected]

David Connerty-Marin | Communications Director | [email protected]

Kara Dunford | Communications Manager | [email protected]

Estelle McKinney | Constituent Services Specialist | [email protected]

David Meni | Deputy Chief of Staff & Legislative Director | [email protected]

Maricela Nava | Deputy Chief of Staff & Scheduler | [email protected]

Sabrin Qadi | Senior Legislative Aide | [email protected]

Niccole Rivero | Chief of Staff | [email protected]

Eliza-Roche Robinson | Constituent Services Specialist | [email protected]



Related

Councilmember Brianne K. Nadeau delivered the following remarks during a Committee on Business and Economic Development hearing on the Recycling Refund and Litter Reduction Amendment Act of 2025 (the "bottle bill").
The bill will receive a hearing on October 1 at 9:30 am in the Committee on Business and Economic Development. Sign up to testify and submit testimony.
At Monday's Council vote on the First Reading of the FY 2026 budget, we restored funds to critical programs, approved funding for ranked choice voting, and postponed action on the ill-conceived repeal of I-82, the tipped minimum wage.

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