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P.O. Box 77761 |
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About ANCsAn Advisory Neighborhood Commission (ANC) is a nonpartisan neighborhood organization that serves as the neighborhood's official voice in advising the District government and Federal agencies on matters that affect its service area. Issues include zoning, streets, recreation, education, social services, sanitation, planning, safety, and health. District officials must obtain ANCs' recommendations on these matters but need not follow the recommendations. The ANCs' most important power, therefore, is the power of involved and concerned citizens. Advisory Neighborhood Commissioners, each elected from a Single Member District (SMD) of about 2,000 voters, serve without pay for two-year terms. The ANCs were created in 1976, a unique feature of the District's Home Rule. There are currently 37 ANCs. ANC 5C includes areas of the Bloomingdale, Brookland, Eckington, Edgewood, Shaw and Truxton Circle neighborhoods. For a brief history of the origins and role of Advisory Neighborhood Commissions, click here .
ADVISORY NEIGHBORHOOD COMMISSION QUALIFICATIONS An ADVISORY NEIGHBORHOOD COMMISSION (ANC) is a boundaried area of the city subdivided into smaller areas (with populations of approximately 2,000 residents) called SINGLE MEMBER DISTRICTS (SMDs). The term for an ANC Commissioner is two (2) years. The office is nonpartisan. Each ANC Commissioner is nominated and elected by the registered voters who reside in the same Single Member District as the candidate. The ANC Commissioner is an unsalaried official who represents his or her neighborhood community (single member district) on the Advisory Neighborhood Commission. The Commission represents the neighborhood and advises the District government on issues relating to zoning, social service programs, health, police protection, sanitation, and recreation. Establishment of the Advisory Neighborhood Commissions was made possible under the provisions of the District of Columbia Self Government and Governmental Reorganization Act (Section 738) and the Advisory Neighborhood Commission Act of 1975 (D.C. Law No. 121). In order to hold the office of Advisory Neighborhood Commissioner, an individual must meet the following qualifications:
The Board will provide each candidate who obtains petition forms with a list of the registered voters in his or her Single Member District. We urge that the petition be checked against the list to ensure that it meets or exceeds the minimum signature requirement.
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