The District of Columbiaโs only public hospital received a boost despite a proposed cut in its subsidy and the cityโs leading academic high school will move to a new location in the near future.
Tensions flared as members debated over increasing the budget for the ailing United Medical Center (UMC), the only hospital serving residents in Wards 7 and 8 in Southeast. Council member Trayon White (D-Ward 8) proposed an amendment to increase the subsidy to UMC from $15 million proposed by Council member Vincent Gray (D-Ward 7) following an impassioned appeal related to an extraordinary increase in gun violence over the Memorial Day weekend.
โWeโre in a situation where itโs a matter of life and death for residents east of the Anacostia River,โ White said. โSo the hospital conversation is a priority for us.โ

The $22 million came from the $15 million that Gray wanted, $4 million that D.C. Council Chairman Phil Mendelson (D) found in the budget and $3 million that White cobbled together from various programs and presented to the council in the form of an amendment. Despite Grayโs opposition to Whiteโs amendment and his reservations about Mendelsonโs $4 million, the council supported the Ward 8 lawmaker with 10 votes, two opposed (Gray and Mendelson) and D.C. Council member Mary Cheh (D-Ward 3) voted present due to an employment conflict of interest.
Shaw area residents filled the council chambers to hear the final decision on a proposal to relocate Banneker Academic High School to a site off Rhode Island Avenue NW. where a Shaw middle school was promised years ago. A vote of 7-6 sealed the move. Shaw will move to Bannekerโs Euclid Street NW location, also.
The councilโs unanimous approval of the 2020 budget totaling $15.5 billion budget now moves on to the U.S. Congress for review. If the Congress has no objections, the budget, it will take effect Oct. 1.
Cheh works as a professor at the George Washington University School of Law and George Washingtonโs Hospital seeks to manage the proposed St. Elizabethโs East community hospital.
Grayโs proposed cut of UMCโs subsidy of $25 million two weeks ago ignited protests from unions and some East End residents. The result, some say, would have meant UMC would close in roughly four years while a firm deal to build the St. Elizabeths East community hospital hasnโt been finalized as of yet.
Gray disputed that assertion before Whiteโs amendment vote.
Members of the District of Columbia Nurses Association (DNCA) and the Service Employees International Union (SEIU), Local 1199, came to the John A. Wilson Building earlier before the budget vote to make it clear that cutting UMC will harm Ward 7 and 8 residents and employees of the embattled UMC.
โWe must stand together,โ Rev. Graylan Hagler, senior pastor of the Plymouth Congregational United Church of Christ, told a crowd of 50 people that rallied outside of the Wilson Building. โWe need to make sure that D.C. doesnโt have an apartheid medical system where the poor donโt have access to quality care and the rich do. We cannot wait until 2023 to know if the residents of Wards 7 and 8 have a hospital; we need to know now.โ
Members of the DCNA and the SEIU sat in Room 500 as the council considered the budget. DCNA members wore black T-shirts with white writing of their organizationโs name while the SEIU wore their signature purple T-shirts.
Washington Teachers Union president Elizabeth Davis showed her support for the UMC union workers by wearing a DCNA T-shirt.
When the council passed Whiteโs amendment, the DCNA and union members expressed wary satisfaction.
โIt is not enough,โ Alma Ames, who works at UMC and a member of SEIU, said. โThirty-two million would have been better.โ
Ames said council members donโt understand the impact of financially undermining UMC and how it will affect residents and employees.
โMany of our patients get their insurance from the government, Medicaid and Medicare,โ she said. She also said the operator of UMC, Mazars USA, doesnโt seem sensitive to the needs of patients and employees.
โWe [the employees] work hard to give the best care we can,โ Ames said.
White said East End residents have a deficit in health care services and the $22 million โis a drop in the bucketโ in what is really needed to meet patientsโ needs.
The Ward 8 council member noted that schools in his ward received cuts of about $10 million from the Bowser budget โand we restored that partially.โ
โOur students are falling further behind and that hurts our community,โ said White, a former D.C. Board of Education member representing his ward.
Overall, White voted for the budget though he had reservations.
โWith a $15.6 billion budget, we can do more to help those who need it the most,โ he said. โIt seems like we laid out the red carpet for new residents.โ

