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Advisory Neighborhood Commission district 7F08

Single-member district 7F08 of Advisory Neighborhood Commission 7F in Washington, D.C., has existed since 2023, its electorate consisting entirely of inmates of the D.C. Jail. From 2013 to 2022, the jail's residents made up a majority of district 7F07, from which 7F08 was then carved out. As of December 2023, 7F08's commissioner is Shameka Hayes.

Advisory Neighborhood Commission district 7F08
Constituency
for the Advisory Neighborhood Commissions
Map of Advisory Neighborhood Commission district 7F08
RegionWashington, D.C.
Population‹See Tfd› 1,700
Current constituency
Created2022
Number of members1
Member(s)Shameka Hayes

While district 7F07 first appeared in the 2012 general election, no election was contested until 2020, partly because convicted felons—the longest-term residents of the jail, where stays typically last less than a year—could not vote and were thus barred from running for the Commission. After D.C. enfranchised all felons in 2020, several inmates ran write-in campaigns in 2020, but all failed on procedural grounds. Joel Castón, who would have won in 2020 but for a paperwork error, won a special election the next year to fill the vacancy caused by his own disqualification—the first election in American history in which both the victor and all members of the electorate were incarcerated.[1] After receiving parole from his life sentence and moving to the one residential complex within 7F07, Castón successfully lobbied to carve out a district for just the jail, 7F08. In 2022, Leonard Bishop was elected to be the new district's first commissioner. Bishop was transferred to another facility in July 2023 and replaced by Hayes in a special election. Hayes, who is incarcerated pending trial, is one of only roughly 100 female residents of the 1,700-person district.

2013–2022: District 7F07 edit

The Advisory Neighborhood Commissions (ANCs) of Washington, D.C., advise the district government on a variety of matters. Commissioners serve two-year terms. They draw no salary but receive funding for expenses and staffing.[P 1] ANC 7F is part of Ward 7. During redistricting in 2011 after the 2010 census, the D.C. Council created district 7F07, encompassing the D.C. Jail; the D.C. General homeless shelter (since demolished); the Harriet Tubman Women's Shelter; and St. Coletta of Greater Washington, a school for students with intellectual disabilities.[2][3] According to the District of Columbia Board of Elections (BOE) and Department of Corrections (DOC), inmates are eligible to serve as commissioners provided they meet residency requirements. The average stay in the jail as of 2020 is 285 days, less than the two-year term.[3]

2020 and 2021 elections edit

No candidates contested the seat from its inaugural election in 2012 through 2018. In 2020, D.C. restored felons' right to vote; since commissioners must be eligible to vote, this increased the pool of potential candidates, including those serving the longest sentences. The same year, the advocacy group Neighbors for Justice began to pressure the DOC to make inmates aware of the election and their eligibility to run in it. The DOC refused to distribute material not originating from the BOE, while the BOE refused as it was not in "the business of encouraging particular people or particular groups to run for office".[3] The election proceeded in November 2020 without any listed candidates.[4] Of 23 write-in votes cast, 21 went to candidates who had not signed the required affirmation of write-in candidacy, leaving only Joel Castón,[4] who had run at the suggestion of his former professor, Marc Morjé Howard of Georgetown University's Prison Scholars Program.[1]: 5:08 [5] However, Castón was registered to vote in Ward 8 and was thus ruled ineligible. Castón, who had not lived in Ward 8 since he received a life sentence for murder 26 years prior, attributed the issue to incorrect guidance given by prison staff when he registered. Nearby ANC 6B denounced the board's decision.[4]

Elections to fill empty seats were subsequently canceled due to COVID-19. The D.C. Council ordered the BOE to resume elections in March 2021, partly because of the 7F07 vacancy.[2][P 2] Twenty-five signatures are required for running in a special election, and amidst a 23-hour-a-day COVID lockdown, guards circulated petitions on inmates' behalves. Castón qualified for the ballot, as did four other inmates.[2] The DOC produced a video, later published on YouTube by Neighbors for Justice, of the candidates giving statements.[P 3] The election on June 15 saw 142 votes cast, 141 of them by inmates.[6] Castón won with 33% of the vote,[6] making him the first incarcerated person to win an election in D.C.[7] and marking the first election in U.S. history where both the electorate and winning candidate were incarcerated.[1]

Castón's tenure edit

Castón was sworn in by Judge Milton C. Lee, wearing a suit provided by the DOC. The DOC gave Castón an office for his work as commissioner, including a computer and a landline phone.[7] He used Zoom to conduct official business with people outside the jail,[1] including participating in "hybrid" ANC meetings that had been established in April 2020 because of the pandemic.[8] The program was extended in July 2021, during Castón's tenure.[9] Neighborhood activists connected him to residents of the women's shelter and Park Kennedy, an apartment building then under development across the street.[7] Castón was nearly transferred to a prison outside of D.C. on November 9, 2021, on the eve of planned testimony to the D.C. Council about prison conditions, but the transfer was canceled amid outcry.[10] He was released on parole on November 22,[11] having had his sentence reduced under D.C.'s Incarceration Reduction Amendment Act.[7] Castón, who moved in to Park Kennedy, remained the commissioner after his release.[11][12][13] He would later become a member of the D.C. Sentencing Commission.[14]

2023–present: District 7F08 edit

 
District 7F08 was carved out to exclusively represent the inmates of the D.C. Jail.

During the 2021 redistricting of the ANCs based on the 2020 census, advocates lobbied to make the D.C. Jail its own ANC district. After initial plans were drawn for such a carve-out, Council Chairman Phil Mendelson proposed to keep the jail and Park Kennedy in the same district, citing the jail's small population (1,300) compared to the average district population of 2,000. Councilmember Elissa Silverman, a member of the redistricting subcommittee, criticized Mendelson in strong terms. Castón, who had been a co-chair of the Ward 7 redistricting task force, said in a letter to the D.C. Council that "having an incarcerated resident represent the residents of the jail as ANC Commissioner is important not only because of the hope and public safety benefits it brings, but also because the residents of the jail are a vulnerable population with their own unique challenges and they cannot be adequately represented by somebody on the outside". In response, Mendelson reverted to the original plan for a standalone district for the jail, 7F08.[12]

2022 election and Bishop's tenure edit

In the November 2022 D.C. general election, 68 write-in votes were cast for seat 7F08,[P 4] of which 46 were for people who had affirmed their write-in candidacy.[P 5] Leonard Bishop won 12 votes, a plurality.[P 5] He was sworn in on January 12, 2023, by Councilmember Brooke Pinto. Like Castón, Bishop was serving a life sentence and was at the D.C. Jail pending consideration of an IRRA motion.[15]

Bishop, a student at Georgetown and Ashland University and a youth mentor,[15][16] attended ANC meetings via Zoom and received guidance from other commissioners on procedural matters. He told the Washington City Paper that he met with Castón, who advised him, "Listen to the people, man". Bishop's chief concerns with the jail included slow mail delivery, low-quality and unhealthy food, and limits on commissary purchasing that do not adapt to inflation-borne price hikes. He also sought to increase access to vocational education for inmates.[15] Bishop worked with alleged participants in the 2021 assault on the U.S. Capitol, whose presence in the jail had brought Congressional scrutiny into living conditions there.[15][17] He told the City Paper, "Those other things they been complaining about, but we've been complaining about [them] for years. And it went ignored. The food, the conditions. I guess they just helped shed light on an ongoing situation."[15]

Bishop, who had advocated for inmates' right to testify before the D.C. Council, was scheduled for transfer to United States Penitentiary, McCreary, a high-security prison in Kentucky where he had previously been incarcerated, shortly after he testified in favor of a proposed law to improve food at the jail.[16][18] Bishop still had an actual innocence petition pending under the Innocence Protection Act.[16][19] Stating his desire to serve out his two-year term on ANC 7F, he reached out to other elected officials.[16] Sixty other commissioners sought to prevent Bishop's transfer, alongside Pinto and Eleanor Holmes Norton, D.C.'s delegate to Congress. However, he was moved on July 20, rendering him ineligible to remain a commissioner.[18][19][20] As of December 2023, he was imprisoned at USP McCreary.[P 6]

2023 election and Hayes's tenure edit

A special election was held in December 2023 to replace Bishop, with about 100 ballots cast in the jail's branch of the D.C. Public Library. The League of Women Voters registered over 100 inmates to vote. Media were allowed to observe the election, although under strict restrictions as to access. Shameka Hayes won a special election to replace Bishop, becoming the first woman to represent the D.C. Jail.[21] (The main facility at the D.C. Jail, the Central Detention Facility, houses only men.[15] As a result, only around 100 of the 1,700 residents in 7F08 are women.[21]) Hayes defeated 10 other candidates with a 25-vote plurality.[21] Hayes, who like Howard and Bishop has attended classes at Georgetown University while in jail,[22] was awaiting trial on drug charges; it was unclear if she would be at the D.C. Jail long enough to serve out the remainder of Bishop's term.[21]

Hayes retained the accommodations that had been granted to Castón and Bishop. Entering her term, she cited hygiene concerns in her unit, which she said had two working showers and was failing to provide clean jumpsuits to women who were menstruating.[22] She also criticized food and medical issues in the jail (saying she had gone from a large to a triple-extra-large clothing size while incarcerated) and gender disparities in access to education in what she called a "male-run facility".[22][23] Hayes was sworn in in January with Councilmember Vincent C. Gray in attendance.[23]

Election results edit

As of January 2024, the Board of Elections' website does not include results for special elections.[P 7] The results of the 2021 special election can be reconstructed from news reports, although with some details missing. News coverage of the 2023 special election does not include detailed figures, and thus no table is included below.

2020 Washington, D.C. Advisory Neighborhood Commission district 7F07 election[4]
Party Candidate Votes %
Nonpartisan Joel Castón (write-in) 2 8.70
Disqualified write-ins 21 91.30
Total votes 23 100.0
2021 Washington, D.C. Advisory Neighborhood Commission district 7F07 special election[24]
Party Candidate Votes %
Nonpartisan Joel Castón[a] 48 33.80
Nonpartisan Kim Thompson[a] 31 21.83
Nonpartisan Gary Proctor[a] 23 16.20
Nonpartisan K. Littlepage-El[a] 21 14.79
Nonpartisan Aaron Success Brown[a] 19 13.38
Total votes 142[b] 100.0
2022 Washington, D.C. Advisory Neighborhood Commission district 7F08 election[P 4][P 5]
Party Candidate Votes %
Nonpartisan Leonard Eugene Bishop (write-in) 12 17.65
Nonpartisan Seth Andrews (write-in) 9 13.24
Nonpartisan Arik Adani Sims (write-in) 5 7.35
Nonpartisan Aaron Brown (write-in) 3 4.41
Nonpartisan E'Monnie Barnes (write-in) 3 4.41
Nonpartisan Brittany Jones (write-in) 2 2.94
Nonpartisan Xavier Lee (write-in) 2 2.94
Nonpartisan Curtis Donnell Roach (write-in) 2 2.94
Nonpartisan Rasheed Carroll (write-in) 2 2.94
Nonpartisan Kim Thompson (write-in) 1 1.47
Nonpartisan Philip McDaniel (write-in) 1 1.47
Nonpartisan Lache Cuffey (write-in) 1 1.47
Nonpartisan Lashawn Alexander (write-in) 1 1.47
Nonpartisan Robert Santana (write-in) 1 1.47
Nonpartisan Harold Cunningham (write-in) 1 1.47
Disqualified write-ins 22 32.35
Total votes 68 100.0

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Source does not say whether candidates ran as write-ins or were on the ballot.
  2. ^ Source does not say whether any disqualified write-in votes were cast.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Dwyer, Devin; Cruz, Abby; Herndon, Sarah (August 1, 2021). "Elected from jail, DC official advances voting rights and racial justice". ABC News (Video and article). Retrieved December 20, 2023.
  2. ^ a b c Austermuhle, Martin (June 8, 2021) [June 3, 2021]. "In This Local Election, Every Candidate Is Incarcerated At The D.C. Jail". DCist. WAMU. from the original on June 3, 2021. Retrieved December 16, 2023.
  3. ^ a b c Le Dem, Gaspard (October 30, 2020). "Advocates Want a D.C. Jail Resident to Run for an ANC Seat That's Never Been Filled". Washington City Paper. Retrieved December 16, 2023.
  4. ^ a b c d Le Dem, Gaspard (December 18, 2020). "Advocates Denounce Election Results in ANC 7F07 After D.C. Jail Candidate Is Disqualified for Technical Error". Washington City Paper. Retrieved December 16, 2023.
  5. ^ Doerfler, Grace (July 16, 2021). "How Jesuit-educated Joel Castón became the first person to win an election from jail". America. Retrieved December 20, 2023.
  6. ^ a b Austermuhle, Martin (June 17, 2021). "'My Voice Still Matters.': Resident At D.C. Jail Wins Local Election". WAMU. Retrieved December 17, 2023.
  7. ^ a b c d Lai, Stephanie (July 25, 2021). "D.C. reforms gave inmates a vote. Now an elected official is working from jail". The Washington Post. Retrieved December 17, 2023.
  8. ^ Holder, Sarah (December 9, 2021). "The Zoom City Council Meeting Is Here to Stay, Insults and All". Bloomberg Businessweek. from the original on December 14, 2021. Retrieved January 18, 2024.
  9. ^ Chaffin, Gordon (July 21, 2021). "DC neighborhood commissions can continue meeting virtually". Street Sense. Retrieved January 18, 2024.
  10. ^ Gathright, Jenny (November 9, 2021). "Incarcerated ANC Commissioner Will Not Be Transferred Out Of D.C. Jail". DCist. WAMU. from the original on November 9, 2021. Retrieved December 17, 2023.
  11. ^ a b Gathright, Jenny (November 23, 2021). "Ward 7 ANC Commissioner Joel Castón Is Free After 26 Years Of Incarceration". DCist. WAMU. from the original on November 24, 2021. Retrieved December 17, 2023.
  12. ^ a b Gathright, Jenny; Austermuhle, Martin (June 6, 2022). "Last-Minute Changes To New ANC Boundaries Draw Pushback And Concern Over Fate Of D.C. Jail Seat". DCist. WAMU. from the original on June 6, 2022. Retrieved December 17, 2023.
  13. ^ Hall, Lorenzo (February 16, 2022). "DC elected leader adjusts to freedom and new role after release from jail". WUSA. Retrieved January 18, 2024.
  14. ^ Davies, Emily; Brice-Saddler, Michael (February 7, 2024). "Man convicted of murder appointed to D.C. sentencing commission". The Washington Post. Retrieved March 17, 2024.
  15. ^ a b c d e f Ryals, Mitch (May 9, 2023). "Leonard Bishop Wants to Give Incarcerated People Access to D.C. Council Hearings and ANC Meetings". Washington City Paper. Retrieved December 19, 2023.
  16. ^ a b c d Ryals, Mitch (July 17, 2023). "D.C. Jail ANC Scheduled for Transfer to Federal Penitentiary". Washington City Paper. Retrieved December 19, 2023.
  17. ^ Broadwater, Luke (March 25, 2023). "Lawmakers Tour D.C. Jail Where Jan. 6 Defendants Are Held". The New York Times. Retrieved December 19, 2023.
  18. ^ a b Opperman, Lia (July 21, 2023). "Inside Voices: Jail ANC Transferred Out of D.C. After Council Testimony". Washington City Paper.
  19. ^ a b Silverman, Ellie (July 24, 2023). "A D.C. elected official serving from jail was moved out of town". The Washington Post. Retrieved December 19, 2023.
  20. ^ "Incarcerated Advisory Neighborhood Commissioner transferred out of Washington, D.C." The Washington Afro-American. July 29, 2023. Retrieved December 19, 2023.
  21. ^ a b c d Moyer, Justin Wm (December 15, 2023). "A special election inside a D.C. jail results in a first: a female winner". The Washington Post. Retrieved December 19, 2023.
  22. ^ a b c Collins, Sam P. K. (December 15, 2023). "In Special Election, Shameka Hayes Elected as D.C. Jail Advisory Neighborhood Commissioner". The Washington Informer. Retrieved December 19, 2023.
  23. ^ a b Goncalves, Delia (January 11, 2024). "First woman to represent DC jail as ANC sworn-in". WUSA (Video and article). Retrieved February 10, 2024.
  24. ^ Korff, Jay (June 15, 2021). . WJLA. Archived from the original on January 10, 2024. Retrieved January 10, 2024.

Primary sources edit

  1. ^ D.C. Code § 1–207.38
  2. ^ "Council Extends COVID Emergency Authorization, Slows Budget Process to Allow Inclusion of Federal COVID Aid" (Press release). Council of the District of Columbia. March 3, 2021. Retrieved December 17, 2023.
  3. ^ District of Columbia Department of Corrections (June 21, 2021). Candidates running for ANC7F07 Commissioner, June 2021 ANC election, Washington DC (Video). Neighbors for Justice. Retrieved December 16, 2023 – via YouTube.
  4. ^ a b . District of Columbia Board of Elections. Row 6020. Archived from the original on January 29, 2023.
  5. ^ a b c (PDF). District of Columbia Board of Elections. p. 2. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 13, 2023.
  6. ^ Afrika-Ber, Askia (December 2, 2023). "Lessons from an Incarcerated Officeholder". More Than Our Crimes (Interview). Retrieved December 19, 2023.
  7. ^ "DCBOE Election Results". District of Columbia Board of Elections. Retrieved January 18, 2024.

External links edit

  • District 7F07 [2012-2020 Cycle] on OpenANC
  • District 7F08 [2022-2030 Cycle] on OpenANC

advisory, neighborhood, commission, district, 7f08, single, member, district, 7f08, advisory, neighborhood, commission, washington, existed, since, 2023, electorate, consisting, entirely, inmates, jail, from, 2013, 2022, jail, residents, made, majority, distri. Single member district 7F08 of Advisory Neighborhood Commission 7F in Washington D C has existed since 2023 its electorate consisting entirely of inmates of the D C Jail From 2013 to 2022 the jail s residents made up a majority of district 7F07 from which 7F08 was then carved out As of December 2023 update 7F08 s commissioner is Shameka Hayes Advisory Neighborhood Commission district 7F08Constituencyfor the Advisory Neighborhood CommissionsMap of Advisory Neighborhood Commission district 7F08RegionWashington D C Population See Tfd 1 700Current constituencyCreated2022Number of members1Member s Shameka Hayes While district 7F07 first appeared in the 2012 general election no election was contested until 2020 partly because convicted felons the longest term residents of the jail where stays typically last less than a year could not vote and were thus barred from running for the Commission After D C enfranchised all felons in 2020 several inmates ran write in campaigns in 2020 but all failed on procedural grounds Joel Caston who would have won in 2020 but for a paperwork error won a special election the next year to fill the vacancy caused by his own disqualification the first election in American history in which both the victor and all members of the electorate were incarcerated 1 After receiving parole from his life sentence and moving to the one residential complex within 7F07 Caston successfully lobbied to carve out a district for just the jail 7F08 In 2022 Leonard Bishop was elected to be the new district s first commissioner Bishop was transferred to another facility in July 2023 and replaced by Hayes in a special election Hayes who is incarcerated pending trial is one of only roughly 100 female residents of the 1 700 person district Contents 1 2013 2022 District 7F07 1 1 2020 and 2021 elections 1 2 Caston s tenure 2 2023 present District 7F08 2 1 2022 election and Bishop s tenure 2 2 2023 election and Hayes s tenure 3 Election results 4 Notes 5 References 5 1 Primary sources 6 External links2013 2022 District 7F07 editThe Advisory Neighborhood Commissions ANCs of Washington D C advise the district government on a variety of matters Commissioners serve two year terms They draw no salary but receive funding for expenses and staffing P 1 ANC 7F is part of Ward 7 During redistricting in 2011 after the 2010 census the D C Council created district 7F07 encompassing the D C Jail the D C General homeless shelter since demolished the Harriet Tubman Women s Shelter and St Coletta of Greater Washington a school for students with intellectual disabilities 2 3 According to the District of Columbia Board of Elections BOE and Department of Corrections DOC inmates are eligible to serve as commissioners provided they meet residency requirements The average stay in the jail as of 2020 update is 285 days less than the two year term 3 2020 and 2021 elections edit No candidates contested the seat from its inaugural election in 2012 through 2018 In 2020 D C restored felons right to vote since commissioners must be eligible to vote this increased the pool of potential candidates including those serving the longest sentences The same year the advocacy group Neighbors for Justice began to pressure the DOC to make inmates aware of the election and their eligibility to run in it The DOC refused to distribute material not originating from the BOE while the BOE refused as it was not in the business of encouraging particular people or particular groups to run for office 3 The election proceeded in November 2020 without any listed candidates 4 Of 23 write in votes cast 21 went to candidates who had not signed the required affirmation of write in candidacy leaving only Joel Caston 4 who had run at the suggestion of his former professor Marc Morje Howard of Georgetown University s Prison Scholars Program 1 5 08 5 However Caston was registered to vote in Ward 8 and was thus ruled ineligible Caston who had not lived in Ward 8 since he received a life sentence for murder 26 years prior attributed the issue to incorrect guidance given by prison staff when he registered Nearby ANC 6B denounced the board s decision 4 Elections to fill empty seats were subsequently canceled due to COVID 19 The D C Council ordered the BOE to resume elections in March 2021 partly because of the 7F07 vacancy 2 P 2 Twenty five signatures are required for running in a special election and amidst a 23 hour a day COVID lockdown guards circulated petitions on inmates behalves Caston qualified for the ballot as did four other inmates 2 The DOC produced a video later published on YouTube by Neighbors for Justice of the candidates giving statements P 3 The election on June 15 saw 142 votes cast 141 of them by inmates 6 Caston won with 33 of the vote 6 making him the first incarcerated person to win an election in D C 7 and marking the first election in U S history where both the electorate and winning candidate were incarcerated 1 Caston s tenure edit Caston was sworn in by Judge Milton C Lee wearing a suit provided by the DOC The DOC gave Caston an office for his work as commissioner including a computer and a landline phone 7 He used Zoom to conduct official business with people outside the jail 1 including participating in hybrid ANC meetings that had been established in April 2020 because of the pandemic 8 The program was extended in July 2021 during Caston s tenure 9 Neighborhood activists connected him to residents of the women s shelter and Park Kennedy an apartment building then under development across the street 7 Caston was nearly transferred to a prison outside of D C on November 9 2021 on the eve of planned testimony to the D C Council about prison conditions but the transfer was canceled amid outcry 10 He was released on parole on November 22 11 having had his sentence reduced under D C s Incarceration Reduction Amendment Act 7 Caston who moved in to Park Kennedy remained the commissioner after his release 11 12 13 He would later become a member of the D C Sentencing Commission 14 2023 present District 7F08 edit nbsp District 7F08 was carved out to exclusively represent the inmates of the D C Jail During the 2021 redistricting of the ANCs based on the 2020 census advocates lobbied to make the D C Jail its own ANC district After initial plans were drawn for such a carve out Council Chairman Phil Mendelson proposed to keep the jail and Park Kennedy in the same district citing the jail s small population 1 300 compared to the average district population of 2 000 Councilmember Elissa Silverman a member of the redistricting subcommittee criticized Mendelson in strong terms Caston who had been a co chair of the Ward 7 redistricting task force said in a letter to the D C Council that having an incarcerated resident represent the residents of the jail as ANC Commissioner is important not only because of the hope and public safety benefits it brings but also because the residents of the jail are a vulnerable population with their own unique challenges and they cannot be adequately represented by somebody on the outside In response Mendelson reverted to the original plan for a standalone district for the jail 7F08 12 2022 election and Bishop s tenure edit In the November 2022 D C general election 68 write in votes were cast for seat 7F08 P 4 of which 46 were for people who had affirmed their write in candidacy P 5 Leonard Bishop won 12 votes a plurality P 5 He was sworn in on January 12 2023 by Councilmember Brooke Pinto Like Caston Bishop was serving a life sentence and was at the D C Jail pending consideration of an IRRA motion 15 Bishop a student at Georgetown and Ashland University and a youth mentor 15 16 attended ANC meetings via Zoom and received guidance from other commissioners on procedural matters He told the Washington City Paper that he met with Caston who advised him Listen to the people man Bishop s chief concerns with the jail included slow mail delivery low quality and unhealthy food and limits on commissary purchasing that do not adapt to inflation borne price hikes He also sought to increase access to vocational education for inmates 15 Bishop worked with alleged participants in the 2021 assault on the U S Capitol whose presence in the jail had brought Congressional scrutiny into living conditions there 15 17 He told the City Paper Those other things they been complaining about but we ve been complaining about them for years And it went ignored The food the conditions I guess they just helped shed light on an ongoing situation 15 Bishop who had advocated for inmates right to testify before the D C Council was scheduled for transfer to United States Penitentiary McCreary a high security prison in Kentucky where he had previously been incarcerated shortly after he testified in favor of a proposed law to improve food at the jail 16 18 Bishop still had an actual innocence petition pending under the Innocence Protection Act 16 19 Stating his desire to serve out his two year term on ANC 7F he reached out to other elected officials 16 Sixty other commissioners sought to prevent Bishop s transfer alongside Pinto and Eleanor Holmes Norton D C s delegate to Congress However he was moved on July 20 rendering him ineligible to remain a commissioner 18 19 20 As of December 2023 update he was imprisoned at USP McCreary P 6 2023 election and Hayes s tenure edit A special election was held in December 2023 to replace Bishop with about 100 ballots cast in the jail s branch of the D C Public Library The League of Women Voters registered over 100 inmates to vote Media were allowed to observe the election although under strict restrictions as to access Shameka Hayes won a special election to replace Bishop becoming the first woman to represent the D C Jail 21 The main facility at the D C Jail the Central Detention Facility houses only men 15 As a result only around 100 of the 1 700 residents in 7F08 are women 21 Hayes defeated 10 other candidates with a 25 vote plurality 21 Hayes who like Howard and Bishop has attended classes at Georgetown University while in jail 22 was awaiting trial on drug charges it was unclear if she would be at the D C Jail long enough to serve out the remainder of Bishop s term 21 Hayes retained the accommodations that had been granted to Caston and Bishop Entering her term she cited hygiene concerns in her unit which she said had two working showers and was failing to provide clean jumpsuits to women who were menstruating 22 She also criticized food and medical issues in the jail saying she had gone from a large to a triple extra large clothing size while incarcerated and gender disparities in access to education in what she called a male run facility 22 23 Hayes was sworn in in January with Councilmember Vincent C Gray in attendance 23 Election results editAs of January 2024 update the Board of Elections website does not include results for special elections P 7 The results of the 2021 special election can be reconstructed from news reports although with some details missing News coverage of the 2023 special election does not include detailed figures and thus no table is included below 2020 Washington D C Advisory Neighborhood Commission district 7F07 election 4 Party Candidate Votes Nonpartisan Joel Caston write in 2 8 70 Disqualified write ins 21 91 30 Total votes 23 100 0 2021 Washington D C Advisory Neighborhood Commission district 7F07 special election 24 Party Candidate Votes Nonpartisan Joel Caston a 48 33 80 Nonpartisan Kim Thompson a 31 21 83 Nonpartisan Gary Proctor a 23 16 20 Nonpartisan K Littlepage El a 21 14 79 Nonpartisan Aaron Success Brown a 19 13 38 Total votes 142 b 100 0 2022 Washington D C Advisory Neighborhood Commission district 7F08 election P 4 P 5 Party Candidate Votes Nonpartisan Leonard Eugene Bishop write in 12 17 65 Nonpartisan Seth Andrews write in 9 13 24 Nonpartisan Arik Adani Sims write in 5 7 35 Nonpartisan Aaron Brown write in 3 4 41 Nonpartisan E Monnie Barnes write in 3 4 41 Nonpartisan Brittany Jones write in 2 2 94 Nonpartisan Xavier Lee write in 2 2 94 Nonpartisan Curtis Donnell Roach write in 2 2 94 Nonpartisan Rasheed Carroll write in 2 2 94 Nonpartisan Kim Thompson write in 1 1 47 Nonpartisan Philip McDaniel write in 1 1 47 Nonpartisan Lache Cuffey write in 1 1 47 Nonpartisan Lashawn Alexander write in 1 1 47 Nonpartisan Robert Santana write in 1 1 47 Nonpartisan Harold Cunningham write in 1 1 47 Disqualified write ins 22 32 35 Total votes 68 100 0Notes edit a b c d e Source does not say whether candidates ran as write ins or were on the ballot Source does not say whether any disqualified write in votes were cast References edit a b c d Dwyer Devin Cruz Abby Herndon Sarah August 1 2021 Elected from jail DC official advances voting rights and racial justice ABC News Video and article Retrieved December 20 2023 a b c Austermuhle Martin June 8 2021 June 3 2021 In This Local Election Every Candidate Is Incarcerated At The D C Jail DCist WAMU Archived from the original on June 3 2021 Retrieved December 16 2023 a b c Le Dem Gaspard October 30 2020 Advocates Want a D C Jail Resident to Run for an ANC Seat That s Never Been Filled Washington City Paper Retrieved December 16 2023 a b c d Le Dem Gaspard December 18 2020 Advocates Denounce Election Results in ANC 7F07 After D C Jail Candidate Is Disqualified for Technical Error Washington City Paper Retrieved December 16 2023 Doerfler Grace July 16 2021 How Jesuit educated Joel Caston became the first person to win an election from jail America Retrieved December 20 2023 a b Austermuhle Martin June 17 2021 My Voice Still Matters Resident At D C Jail Wins Local Election WAMU Retrieved December 17 2023 a b c d Lai Stephanie July 25 2021 D C reforms gave inmates a vote Now an elected official is working from jail The Washington Post Retrieved December 17 2023 Holder Sarah December 9 2021 The Zoom City Council Meeting Is Here to Stay Insults and All Bloomberg Businessweek Archived from the original on December 14 2021 Retrieved January 18 2024 Chaffin Gordon July 21 2021 DC neighborhood commissions can continue meeting virtually Street Sense Retrieved January 18 2024 Gathright Jenny November 9 2021 Incarcerated ANC Commissioner Will Not Be Transferred Out Of D C Jail DCist WAMU Archived from the original on November 9 2021 Retrieved December 17 2023 a b Gathright Jenny November 23 2021 Ward 7 ANC Commissioner Joel Caston Is Free After 26 Years Of Incarceration DCist WAMU Archived from the original on November 24 2021 Retrieved December 17 2023 a b Gathright Jenny Austermuhle Martin June 6 2022 Last Minute Changes To New ANC Boundaries Draw Pushback And Concern Over Fate Of D C Jail Seat DCist WAMU Archived from the original on June 6 2022 Retrieved December 17 2023 Hall Lorenzo February 16 2022 DC elected leader adjusts to freedom and new role after release from jail WUSA Retrieved January 18 2024 Davies Emily Brice Saddler Michael February 7 2024 Man convicted of murder appointed to D C sentencing commission The Washington Post Retrieved March 17 2024 a b c d e f Ryals Mitch May 9 2023 Leonard Bishop Wants to Give Incarcerated People Access to D C Council Hearings and ANC Meetings Washington City Paper Retrieved December 19 2023 a b c d Ryals Mitch July 17 2023 D C Jail ANC Scheduled for Transfer to Federal Penitentiary Washington City Paper Retrieved December 19 2023 Broadwater Luke March 25 2023 Lawmakers Tour D C Jail Where Jan 6 Defendants Are Held The New York Times Retrieved December 19 2023 a b Opperman Lia July 21 2023 Inside Voices Jail ANC Transferred Out of D C After Council Testimony Washington City Paper a b Silverman Ellie July 24 2023 A D C elected official serving from jail was moved out of town The Washington Post Retrieved December 19 2023 Incarcerated Advisory Neighborhood Commissioner transferred out of Washington D C The Washington Afro American July 29 2023 Retrieved December 19 2023 a b c d Moyer Justin Wm December 15 2023 A special election inside a D C jail results in a first a female winner The Washington Post Retrieved December 19 2023 a b c Collins Sam P K December 15 2023 In Special Election Shameka Hayes Elected as D C Jail Advisory Neighborhood Commissioner The Washington Informer Retrieved December 19 2023 a b Goncalves Delia January 11 2024 First woman to represent DC jail as ANC sworn in WUSA Video and article Retrieved February 10 2024 Korff Jay June 15 2021 Inmate Joel Caston becomes first incarcerated person to win elected office in DC WJLA Archived from the original on January 10 2024 Retrieved January 10 2024 Primary sources edit D C Code 1 207 38 Council Extends COVID Emergency Authorization Slows Budget Process to Allow Inclusion of Federal COVID Aid Press release Council of the District of Columbia March 3 2021 Retrieved December 17 2023 District of Columbia Department of Corrections June 21 2021 Candidates running for ANC7F07 Commissioner June 2021 ANC election Washington DC Video Neighbors for Justice Retrieved December 16 2023 via YouTube a b November 8 2022 General Election Certified Results District of Columbia Board of Elections Row 6020 Archived from the original on January 29 2023 a b c 2022 General Election Write In Candidates Certified Results PDF District of Columbia Board of Elections p 2 Archived from the original PDF on January 13 2023 Afrika Ber Askia December 2 2023 Lessons from an Incarcerated Officeholder More Than Our Crimes Interview Retrieved December 19 2023 DCBOE Election Results District of Columbia Board of Elections Retrieved January 18 2024 External links editDistrict 7F07 2012 2020 Cycle on OpenANC District 7F08 2022 2030 Cycle on OpenANC Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Advisory Neighborhood Commission district 7F08 amp oldid 1214226843, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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