Washington, D.C
Washington DC aims to drive visitation beyond its Federal legacy
As Washington DC clocks a successful year of trade milestones, Elliott L. Ferguson, II, President and CEO, Destination DC, highlights India’s key role in its post-pandemic resurgence. He emphasises the significance of adapting trade strategies and making crucial market investments to capitalise on evolving travel demands.
– Prativa Vaidya Bhalla
India has solidified its position as the fourth-largest market for Washington, DC, with 147,562 Indian visitors in 2023, reflecting a 54 per cent surge compared to 2022. Surpassing pre-pandemic levels by 11 per cent, Indian visits have been instrumental in DC’s recovery, with similar growth anticipated in 2024. Key source Indian cities include Mumbai, Delhi, Gujarat, and Bengaluru, with growing interest observed from tier-two Indian cities.
Leisure and business travellers, alongside students, form the largest segment from India. To encourage an increase in the average length of stay for business travellers, Elliott states, “We want to ensure that they spend more nights, bring their families along to enjoy the city, and include Washington in their itineraries for more than just a day trip.” For the MICE sector, DC offers expansive exhibition spaces hosting up to 60,000 people and easy connectivity to other major cities. Most Indian MICE travellers to DC are drawn to larger US-based congresses, especially in the medical and technology sectors.
Ease of Access
Washington Dulles International Airport (IAD) welcomed 9.3 million international passengers, leveraging a 26.9 per cent increase from 2022, and is the fastest-growing international gateway airport in the United States. Elliott points out, “The non-stop flight via Air India to Washington encourages Indian travellers looking to come to the U.S. by flying into Washington and then travelling to other US cities.” As a destination, visitors are drawn to DC’s iconic historic sites, such as monuments, memorials, and the Capitol. However, the focus is now shifting towards a more culturally diverse array of attractions available in Washington.
The U.S. processed over 1.4 million visas in India in 2023, reducing wait times by 75 per cent, despite India’s sheer size and demand volume. The goal is to leverage this visitation momentum and highlight the abundance of experiences beyond the well-known landmarks to attract a larger and evolving demographic. Despite geopolitical shifts, Europe remains the largest market, though pre-Covid China was the number one. India’s trajectory remains positive, with concentrated expansion efforts now reaching out to cities like Chennai, Ahmedabad, and Hyderabad.
Unique DC
Laid out in the 1700s by the French, DC is a green city with only 700,000 inhabitants. It is small but has a large international presence with 185 embassies. Speaking on the ‘There is Only One DC’ campaign unveiled in November 2023, Elliott highlights the unique experiences people can have only in DC. He says, “We have the largest Cherry Blossom Festival in America in the spring, while ‘Passport DC’ is a one-of-a-kind event held in May. Embassies open their doors to the public each weekend for free, and visitors can enjoy that country’s food, music, and dress.” As travel demographics grow younger and more informed, there is a growing interest in immersive experiences that extend beyond traditional attractions to include more unique offerings. He adds, “Our goal is to make sure our markets understand the dynamics of our city versus the federal experience as we look at expanding opportunities and competing with great destinations around the world.”
Cultural Investment
Washington, DC, continually enhances its attractions and features over 100 free activities for visitors. An impressive $8.8 billion investment is dedicated to upgrading Union Station. Efforts are underway to promote the entire region, including historic sites in Maryland, Old Town in Virginia, and the picturesque horse and wine country.
The DC event calendar is brimming with upcoming events and museum openings. The reopening of the National Museum of Women in the Arts in October 2023 marks a significant milestone as the world’s first museum dedicated to women in the arts. The Go-go Museum, inaugurated in February 2024, adds to the fervour. Exciting museum anniversaries are also on the horizon, including the 20th anniversary of the DC Jazz Fest in 2024, World Pride in 2025, and America 250 in 2026. These celebrations promise citywide festivities throughout the year, making Washington, DC, a vibrant destination for visitors from around the globe.
Washington, D.C
First Nebraska civics bee champion crowned, will head to Washington, D.C. for national competition
The state competition, which was put on by the Nebraska Chamber of Commerce & Industry, had three rounds. The first two rounds included 20 multiple choice questions about various historical documents, court cases and civics concepts.
In the final round, the top five students gave short pitches about the essays they submitted on improving a problem in their community. Bernal wrote about the Tyson Plant closure after she visited Lexington in December.
“Things were really starting to be like, ‘Oh my gosh, the Tyson plant is actually closing,’” Bernal said. “Around two weeks later, during the first day back from winter break, my social studies teacher said we’re going to be writing an essay about a problem we see in our community. I thought, ‘Wow, this is something really positive I could use my voice for.’”
In her essay, Bernal said she wanted to bring awareness to the closure and host job fairs for those impacted. Other topics included student mental health, impacts of flooding and the childcare crisis.
Tara Lea, executive vice president of partnerships and programs for the Nebraska Chamber of Commerce & Industry, said more than 500 students submitted essays across Nebraska, making the state fifth in the nation for participation and first per capita.
“We had no idea what to expect when we signed up to do this,” Lea said. “We were just excited all 50 states were doing it. We were proud to be one of them, but Nebraska showed up.”
Washington, D.C
Now streaming: ’51st State’ documentary on a young activist’s fight for DC statehood – WTOP News
One of D.C.’s most personal statehood activism stories can now be seen by a larger audience, two years after its premiere.
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WETA+ adds ’51st State’ documentary as DC voters choose new leadership
One of D.C.’s most personal statehood activism stories can now be seen by a larger audience, two years after its premiere.
WETA has added the documentary “51st State” to its District Docs collection, now streaming on WETA+. The station has also posted the documentary on its YouTube channel.
Voters in last week’s D.C. Democratic primary selected nominees for mayor and delegate who have vowed to keep up the fight for the District’s autonomy, so it’s a fitting time to revisit the film, which follows a young Washingtonian whose life has been shaped by the fight for representation.
D.C. statehood movement is personal for Jamal Holtz. It started long before he became the face of a movement or the subject of a documentary. It began at home.
“When my mom talked about having lack of access to health insurance and the impacts on me and going to school, that was all rooted in our lack of being a state,” Holtz said. “The fact that we didn’t have a vote on the matter of the Affordable Care Act was to show people that, like, people in D.C. actually experience real issues and real problems.”
“51st State” director Hannah Rosenzweig first met Holtz at a 2021 event in Brooklyn organized by 51 for 51 and New Yorkers for D.C. Statehood. The group pushes for D.C. to become a state with 51 votes in the Senate instead of the 60‑vote filibuster threshold.
Rosenzweig said one part of the movement immediately caught her attention.
“I just love the framing of young native Washingtonians,” Rosenzweig said. “Really looking at them as part of a voting rights and civil rights movement.”
She said Holtz stood out from the beginning, saying she knew “he was going places.”
“He’s a leader,” Rosenzweig said. “He’s charismatic — people listen when he talks.”
Filming began in June 2021, when Holtz was 23.
Holtz, who is now 28, said: “You had me when I had braces, to me with facial hair and no braces.”
Serving the community isn’t new to Holtz. He was a member of the Marion Barry Youth Leadership Institute, the city’s long‑running program that trains D.C. teenagers in leadership and public service.
The documentary, which premiered June 16, 2024, at the DC/DOX Film Festival, follows the push for statehood through the House’s passage of H.R. 51, the advocacy campaign in the Senate and the everyday life of a fourth‑generation Washingtonian.
“It talks about D.C. statehood through a different lens,” Holtz said. “What does lack of statehood look like in people’s day‑to‑day lives?”
Rosenzweig said she wanted viewers to see the real Washington — the neighborhoods and the families who rarely appear in national conversations about the city.
“There’s a culture of D.C. that most people don’t know about,” she said. “I love that. In fact, I wanted to move there.”
Holtz spoke to WTOP outside the Wilson Building by the Marion Barry statue, and was asked where he saw himself in 20 years.
“I’ll be standing on the grounds of the 51st state,” Holtz said. “Helping to govern our state and helping live up to the American dream and democracy that the people of D.C. want.”
When the question turned to which office sounded more fun, governor or senator, Holtz smiled and said, “The title will figure it out.”
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Washington, D.C
Reflecting pool to be drained again as Trump claims five vandalism arrests
The Lincoln Memorial reflecting pool is set to be drained again after Donald Trump said on Monday – without providing proof – that five people were arrested for vandalism and five more are under investigation in connection to the algae blooms and peeling paint that appeared weeks after his ill-fated $14m renovation attempt.
“It’s not a lot of damage, but we’ll probably have to let the water out and refix it. They went in there with a knife,” Trump told reporters, describing what he first said was a 290- to 300ft slit in the paint but then later amended to a 350ft slit. He also said someone had put fertilizer into the water, which caused the algae to grow.
Reporters who visited the pool on Sunday could see no evidence of such damage, the Washington Post reported.
The newspaper also interviewed three-time Olympic cyclist David Hearn, who said he had been arrested by US park police on a misdemeanor charge after stopping by the refurbished pool and, out of curiosity, touching one of the pieces of peeling paint liner.
Trump has sought to turn the monument “American flag blue” in time for the for the country’s 250th birthday, which included painting the bottom of the pool a dark shade of navy officially called “Old Glory Blue”.
He awarded a no-bid contract to a company he said had previously done work on swimming pools at one of his golf clubs, and within days of the completion of the work, the water started to appear green from algae plaguing the standing water and the coating of paint applied during the renovation also started to detach.
On Monday, Trump was adamant it was not the pool company to blame for the algae blooms and peeling paint, but “vandals”. When pushed to provide evidence of his claims, he told reporters to call the Department of the Interior and the National Park Service. Neither agency responded immediately to a request for comment, nor did the US park police.
When asked how alleged vandals were able to get so close to one of Washington DC’s most historically symbolic attractions, where there is a heavy police presence, Trump responded that “we didn’t have a lot” of police then.
“Who would think that somebody would go into a pool and take a knife and start cutting it?” he asked.
It’s unclear when the pool will be drained, but a spokesperson with the DC Water Authority said the agency has issued the national parks service a temporary permit to discharge water into a sewer that flows into a local treatment facility. The permit was issued 16 June and expires 2 July, the spokesperson said.
Trump had earlier posted on social media that “there is a 10-year prison sentence for the destruction, or even the attempted destruction, of such things – Which will be fully enforced!”
Destruction of federal property can carry a maximum prison sentence of 10 years.
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