Residents report second arson attempt at 3003 Van Ness

On Monday, Dec. 30th, 2024, residents of 3003 Van Ness reported an apparent attempt to light a fire inside a hallway on the 7th floor of the South building. Those who observed the incidents said that the perpetrator may have been a former resident of the building.

Ashes in stairwell on South 7th floor, 3003 Van Ness

This attempted arson followed another unusual incident on Saturday, Dec. 28th, when a fire extinguisher was sprayed in the hallway of the South 7th floor. Video taken immediately following the incident shows extensive powder and footprints leading toward the exit elevator.

Fire extinguisher residue and footprints

RESIDENTS’ CONCERNS

These most recent attempts to set fire inside 3003 Van Ness follow another incident on Aug. 20th, 2023, in which an apparent non-resident spilled gasoline in a stairwell in an upper floor of the West building.

There are other serious reasons for concern:

  1. Fire alarms have gone off dozens of times in the past year, as often as once a week or more. They occur so often that when an alarm goes off, many residents don’t leave their apartments because they assume that the incident is a false alarm.

  2. The building management has not even informed residents about the arson attempt.

  3. Building security is horrible at 3003 Van Ness. Over the past two and a half years, one or more exterior doors has been broken at almost all times, allowing easy access into the building. In addition, three to four doors from the underground garages have also been broken at almost all times, and the loading dock door is frequently left open. It is extremely easy to enter 3003 Van Ness, and any intruder who would want to create a problem of any sort could easily gain direct access to hallways.

  4. The fire alarms at 3003 Van Ness do not connect directly to the DC Fire Department, but instead are routed to a third-party company, which decides whether to alert the Fire Department. Most residents don’t know this, so they assume that if in the event of a fire they pull an alarm the Fire Department will be directly alerted. This is not true — residents must call 911 to get quickly to the Fire Department.

  5. There are many senior citizens and others living in the building, who would have trouble evacuating in the case of a fire.

  6. Equity Residential has done little to address these issues in recent years. For example, until recently, it has made little effort to repair the exterior security doors. As evidence, the tenant association has recorded more than 80 videos of broken doors at 3003 Van Ness.

  7. Equity Residential refuses to hire an experienced 24/7 security guard service despite a high number of security problems in the building. City records submitted at recent testimony before the DC Council show that residents of 3003 Van Ness make on average one call to 911 for assistance every day. Some of these are for serious incidents — in recent months residents have called 911 for reported stabbing, assault, theft, burglary, disorderly disturbance, domestic violence, sexual assault, aggravated assault, illegal firearms, drug dealing, overdoses, harassment, and fraud.

911 calls originating from 3003 Van Ness in October, 2024


The tenant association has tried repeatedly in the past to get Equity Residential senior management to take the security and fire risks seriously. For example, see the long list of posts about security issues.

Or see these past posts and letters to Equity Residential senior management regarding fire risks:


THE TENANT ASSOCIATION VERY STRONGLY RECOMMENDS THAT RESIDENTS EVACUATE THE BUILDING WHEN FIRE ALARMS GO OFF.

DESPITE THE FACT THAT THERE HAVE BEEN MANY FALSE ALARMS, THE RECENT ATTEMPT TO SET A FIRE IN THE HALLWAY SUGGEST THAT THERE IS A RISK OF AN ACTUAL FIRE. RESIDENTS SHOULD TAKE THIS RISK SERIOUSLY.

Tenant president submits Notice of Appeal of court decision in rent case

Harry Gural, president of the Van Ness South Tenants Association, yesterday submitted a notice to the Rental Housing Commission that he will appeal a decision by the DC Office of Administrative Hearings (OAH) in an eight-year rent case.

The announcement may come as a surprise to those following the case, because the final decision by OAH ordered Equity Residential to pay Gural $59,888 for past overcharges.

However, Gural had long argued that DC law mandates that the housing provider pay three times the amount of the overcharges if they were made in bad faith.

(a) Any person who knowingly (1) demands or receives any rent for a rental unit in excess of the maximum allowable rent applicable to that rental unit under the provisions of subchapter II of this chapter, or (2) substantially reduces or eliminates related services previously provided for a rental unit, shall be held liable by the Rent Administrator or Rental Housing Commission, as applicable, for the amount by which the rent exceeds the applicable rent charged or for treble that amount (in the event of bad faith) and/or for a roll back of the rent to the amount the Rent Administrator or Rental Housing Commission determines.
— DC law §42–3509.01. Penalties

This central part of the case depends on whether Equity Residential acted in bad faith when it charged Gural more than $50,000 over eight years. (Gural was forced to pay “only” $31,000 into escrow under an order in Superior Court.)

DC law (§42–3502.08) states that in rent-stabilized apartment buildings like 3003 Van Ness, the landlord can charge an annual rent increase calculated by multiplying the current rent by a figure equal to inflation (CPI-W) plus 2%. For example, if the current rent is $2,000 per month and the inflation rate is 3%, the maximum rent increase would be $2,000 x (3% + 2%) = $100. The new maximum rent would be $2,100.

Nevertheless, evidence shows that Equity Residential had inaccurately listed Gural’s current rent as an amount that far exceeded his actual rent paid, and then demanded a rent increase based on this higher amount — demanding a rent increase of $365. In fact, the maximum rent increase by law was $65.

Equity Residential argues that it could not possibly have known how to calculate rent increases under DC law, and that it could calculated rent increases based on falsely reported amounts that far exceed the amount actually paid.

Evidence introduced by Gural shows that Equity had frequently demanded of other tenants rent increases that exceeded $1,000 per month.

Former Attorney General Karl Racine won $1 million award for residents of 3003 Van Ness for this practice. Nevertheless, Equity Residential continued to argue that it could not possibly know that it was overcharging Gural even after the 2021 decision in the Attorney General’s case.

For this reason and others related to charges of retaliation, Gural submitted his Notice of Appeal to the Rental Housing Commission, the three-person panel which serves as the appellate body for rental housing cases.

It appears that the eight-year case will drag on.

How to get help if your apartment was flooded

If your apartment or belongings were damaged by the widespread flooding in the West building on December 16th, here are some tips for getting help.

  1. Report the incident to Equity Residential management for 3003 Van Ness. Equity has an online portal for reporting maintenance problems. However, we strongly recommend that you also email the building manager, Dan Burkes, at dburkes@eqr.com. You should cc the tenant association at vnsta@vnsta.org.

  2. Take extensive photos and video of the damage. If it isn’t repaired in a timely manner, take more photos and videos as evidence that it was not repaired.

  3. Fill out this important survey by the tenant association so we know about your problem and can help.

  4. File a request with the DC Department of Buildings for an inspection of your unit. The DOB is closely aware of the situation, and it will send someone to inspect your apartment for damage.

If you have additional questions, email the tenant association at vnsta@vnsta.org.


You can help your neighbors by making sure that they receive this information. While many residents of 3003 Van Ness are on the tenant association email newsletter distribution list, some residents are not. You can help share the information above by printing a few copies of this one-page flyer and posting them on your hall or slipping them under the doors of nearby apartments. (If you slip them under the door, please be sure to slip them all the way under.)

Thank you!

At least two of four elevators in the West building are out of service

The recent massive flooding in the West building of 3003 Van Ness has seriously damaged elevators #3 and #4 in the West building (those closest to Veazey Terrace.)

Residents report that one of the other two elevators in the West building has been sporadically out of service, apparently due to workers removing washers and dryers from all of the laundry rooms in the West building. As a result, in recent days residents of the 11-story West building often have had access to only one elevator. Many residents, especially senior citizens, have expressed their concern.

According to management, “it will take some time for the other two elevators to be up and running as they have extensive damage due to the flood.”


See below a photo taken on the day of the flood of one of the elevators that was severely damaged. This elevator and the one adjacent to it are now out of service.

Flood in elevator (Dec. 16, 2024)

DC Department of Buildings inspects broken security doors

At the request of the Van Ness South Tenants Association, the DC Department of Buildings today inspected broken security doors at 3003 Van Ness.

Just two days earlier, VNSTA reviewed the security doors leading from the street into the underground garages, and from the underground garages into the West and South buildings. The tenant association found that it remains easy to enter the residential hallways of 3003 Van Ness from the street, through multiple doors.

The tenant association has recorded more than 80 videos of broken security doors at 3003 Van Ness over more than two years.

VNSTA awaits a report by the Department of Buildings.

See video below recorded on December 15th, 2024.

Equity provides information to residents regarding major mainline water leak

Equity Residential has shared some information with residents regarding the widespread flooding caused by a major pipe that burst on the 10th floor of the West building just after midnight on December 16th. (See information about the flooding along with photos in the previous news item below.)

At 1:03 am last night, Equity sent an email to residents, which said this:

This email is to inform you that we have shut the water off to the building due to an emergency water leak. Our team is on site assessing the issue, once we have a time frame for repairs, we will send a follow up email.


NOTE: An earlier version of this post stated that Equity did not send additional information until 9:30 pm on December 16th. That has proven to be incorrect — management sent a second email, only to residents of the West building, at 11:58 am on that day. This second email stated:

As you are probably already aware we had a major mainline water leak that has caused significant water intrusion on the 10th floor. This affected the common hallways and stairwells areas as well as some apartments. The plumbing repairs are now complete and our team/contractors are working to access damage and start repairs.

Today, a service team member will inspect apartments in the affected areas (consisting of apartment numbers ending 5 through 21) between the 1st floor and the 10th floor. Should you notice any water damages in your home and your apartment number doesn't end in 5 through 21, please reach out and let us know so we can inspect your home as well.

We apologize for any inconvenience caused. We thank you for your understanding and patience during this time.


Another email was sent to residents of the West building at 8:25 am on Tuesday, December 17th. It stated that:

We wanted to provide an update regarding the work being completed in your home due to the water intrusion caused by a mainline pipe malfunction. Contractors will be back today to complete a moisture reading in the areas that were affected in your home. They will begin at 9 am until all apartments are completed. Once the readings are complete we will follow up with next steps.

Thank you for your patience.


Burst pipe causes massive flooding in the West building

After midnight last night, a pipe burst on the 10th or 11th floor of the West building of 3003, causing large-scale flooding all the way down to at least the 2nd floor.

Water poured through ceilings and walls of apartments below. Some residents reported water in their apartments several inches deep. Some electrical outlets crackled, raising concerns for safety. Water flooded some of the hallways and stairwells many floors below the burst pipe.

Residents alerted the front desk staff, who reported that an off-site maintenance team was at least an hour away. Someone set off a fire alarm. The water to the entire building was eventually shut off, but water continued to flood the lower floors for at least several hours.

See photos and video below.

Flooding on the 5th floor of the West building

Flooding on the G1 level of the West building

Flooding in a stairwell

Flooding in the hall of the 3rd floor of the West building

Flooding in one of the elevators

Flooding on the 3rd floor of the West building


Tenant president testifies before DC Council on building security

Van Ness South Tenants Association president Harry Gural testified before the DC Council on Tuesday about chronically broken exterior doors at 3003 Van Ness. The testimony was part of a DC Council hearing on the SAFE Act, legislation developed by Attorney General Brian Schwalb designed to help increase building security in DC apartment buildings.

In his testimony, Gural told DC Councilmembers that calls by residents of 3003 Van Ness to 911 for help from the police have skyrocketed in recent months, with one or two calls per day. Other apartment buildings along Connecticut Avenue have experienced similar increases in recent years, with calls from five to ten times higher than a few years ago.

Reading from actual 911 call data retrieved from the DC Office of Unified Communications, Gural said that in October 2024 alone, residents of 3003 Van Ness had called the police for a stabbing, assaults, theft, burglary, disorderly disturbance, domestic violence, and other incidents. In addition, in prior months, records show calls to the police for sexuall assault, aggravated assault, illegal firearms, drug dealing, overdoses, harrassment, stolen vehicles, and suspicious persons.

Gural’s written testimony including 31 pages of 911 calls, thumbnails of dozens of YouTube videos, as well as a March 2022 report by the tenant association, “Security Failures at 3003 Van Ness.

Gural reported to Councilmembers that at the same time that there were these clear signs of high levels of criminal activity at 3003 Van Ness, building security remained extraoldinarily lax, with several exterior doors being broken at almost all times, allowing easy access to the building to non-residents. Even on the day of the hearing, video shows that there were four broken security doors at 3003 Van Ness.

Gural testified that he and other members of the tenant association had been recording video of these broken doors for more than two and a half years and have posted more than 80 such videos on the Van Ness South Tenants Association YouTube channel.

Dozens of other housing advocates joined Gural in supporting Attorney General’s Schalb’s SAFE Act, which is designed to put pressure on owners and managers of rental housing properties that do not take adequate steps to secure their buildings.

The SAFE Act will be reintroduced in January and will likely be voted on in the winter or spring.


Read Gural’s testimony, 911 data and other supporting documents

The tenant association encourages members who have an opinion about security at 3003 Van Ness or about the SAFE Act to add a comment below.

Fines against Equity Residential lowered from $1.2 million to $164 thousand

In August, we reported that the DC Department of Buildings (DOB) had levied $1,218,612 in fines on Equity Residential for almost 750 violations at 3003 Van Ness over the past three years. Updated data, which shows far less in fines, is now available.

The information was retrieved from the DOB’s SCOUT online data system and Landlord Violations Tool.

The fines were the result of the DOB’s "proactive inspection" of 3003 Van Ness, which was supposed to inspect the entire building. Sixteen months later, only a portion of the building has been inspected, but the exact percentage isn’t known.

It also isn’t clear that any of the $1.2 million in fines has been paid to date.

However, review of Department of Buildings online data for 3003 Van Ness as of Dec. 11th, 2024, shows that the amount has been lowered by more than $1 million to $164,492. It appears that the reason that the amount has dropped so precipitously is that, according to DOB, Equity Residential has fixed the violations that had been cited.

If that is correct, it means that Equity Residential will have paid little or nothing in fines for widespread violations of the housing code.

Moreover, it isn’t clear if Equity Residential has fixed housing code violations in the units that were not inspected by the Department of Buildings.

The Van Ness South Tenants Association will seek clarification from the Department of Buildings about its policy about housing code violations and fines.

Residents of 3003 Van Ness who want to find out if there are any outstanding fines for violations in their units can view the PDF file above or the identical Excel file below.

Download an easier-to-read Excel version of the current fines

Exterior security doors are still broken

On the same day (Dec. 10th) that the DC Council held a hearing on proposed legislation to strengthen security at apartment buildings, an informal inspection of security doors at 3003 Van Ness found that four security doors remain broken. The broken doors allow easy access to anyone outside the building to enter the underground garage, and from there to enter the apartment building.

The Van Ness South Tenants Association has been reporting and recording video of broken security doors at 3003 Van Ness for almost three years — more than 80 videos have been posted to VNSTA’s YouTube Channel.

On the same day that the four videos below recorded, the DC Department of Buildings reported that it inspected the doors at 3003 Van Ness that morning - but DOB found only one broken door. However, as the video shows clearly, at least four security doors at 3003 Van Ness were not functioning properly on December 10th, 2024.

The tenant association has reported these broken doors to Equity Residential many times in the past. It reported them to Equity again on Nov. 20th and then again today (Dec. 11th). Today, the tenant association submitted a request to DOB for an inspection of these doors.