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Annie’s Hardware is Petworth’s ace

Anne Stom’s vision and commitment affirm a growing community

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It was two years ago when married couple Anne Stom and Lyn Stoesen were walking together to the Metro near their home in the Park View neighborhood adjacent to Petworth in Northwest Washington, both headed downtown to their government agency jobs. It was unusual for Lyn to take the subway to work, but that morning she made a discovery about her spouse. Anne knew lots of area residents, greeting them by name and exchanging pleasantries along the way.

Anne’s partner began chiding her that she should run for mayor, so many people recognized her. Anne cast aside the humorous suggestion with her easygoing laugh, but responded by saying “What I should do is open a hardware store.”

And that’s exactly what she did.

Long before the Feb. 7 opening of Annie’s Ace Hardware at 1240 Upshur St., N.W., residents of both the Petworth neighborhood where the 7,000-square-foot former auto repair building is located and surrounding environs heralded its planned arrival with celebratory postings on community blogs. An entire portion of Northwest D.C. east of Rock Creek Park above the midtown area — spanning Crestwood and 16th Street Heights through Columbia Heights and Park View and north to Petworth and Brightwood, and stretching into adjoining Northeast neighborhoods — responded enthusiastically to the announcement of Stom’s undertaking.

Nothing signifies that a neighborhood is destined for continued growth and invigoration like a full-service hardware, home improvement and gardening store. Neighborhoods advancing toward broad-based revitalization and experiencing an accelerating influx of residents witness the arrival of new restaurants, bars and retail projects, spurring additional retail and other community amenities.

Risk-taking new entrepreneurs like Stom, discerning a neighborhood need and business opportunity, provide what she describes as an “anchor to the community” extending beyond the enterprise. More than commerce, business investment yields an affirmation of a neighborhood’s future and consumer convenience close to home.

Petworth and neighboring areas have slowly become one of a number of hot new destinations for District living. Couples with children and young singles, including a significant influx of gay and lesbian residents, have in recent years joined local inhabitants. Stom notes with gratitude that both longtime residents and new arrivals have welcomed and patronized her establishment.

Stom was not one who found an Allen wrench instead of a baby rattle in her crib, but she learned the basics over time living her life. Years ago when working at Daedalus Books she built bookcases to hold the library she had begun assembling. While constructing a simple two-step stair outside an earlier home she eagerly invested in a circular saw, a moment she now chuckles as symbolizing what would lead to a stint working as a carpenter’s helper. She later volunteered with Habitat for Humanity homebuilding projects in Anacostia and grew increasingly comfortable with her expanding tool collection and new avocation.

Seven years ago Stom found herself spending evenings and weekends renovating and modernizing her then Park View townhouse when not at her job as project director for the Department of Labor’s national Youthbuild education and training program for disadvantaged youth. She recalls being frustrated that there were no home improvement retailers in the area and found herself hopping in the car to drive across town to a poorly stocked and inadequately staffed national behemoth warehouse outlet for the inevitable forgotten item needed for the day’s construction project.

Nestled on the two-block stretch of Upshur Street separating 13th Street and Georgia Avenue near the Georgia Ave.-Petworth Metro station and north of Columbia Heights, Annie’s Ace Hardware occupies a prominent and attractive building among a string of tidy industrial style structures.

The 12 parking spots outside Stom’s DIY nirvana of more than 18,000 items are continuously accommodating the arrival and departure of customers, with ample curbside parking handy for the surging stream of weekend shoppers beginning Friday evenings through Sundays. Two Zipcars are at the ready, offering either a sedan or pick-up for the wheel-less wondering how they will haul home that shiny new Weber Grill or lawn rake and bags of fertilizer.

It’s not unusual to find locals stabling their bikes at the racks outside for a quick purchase. Neighborhood residents traveling on two wheels soon discover that the store also offers a popular bike repair and maintenance clinic every Saturday from noon to 3 p.m. conducted by non-profit Bike House volunteers.

Inside you’re likely to run into gregarious staff member Rodney Lancaster, one of 13 store employees all living nearby. Sizing up the muscular mountain of a man, with a professional background as an auto mechanic, it’s no surprise to learn that he was a high school linebacker playing on the Roosevelt High School football field across the street when younger.

Like many an independent small business owner, Stom is hands-on and currently on-site every day — ably assisted by energetic store manager Brian Smith. His engaging personality and comfortably competent manner are combined with significant retail experience and previous renovation and landscaping work.

Stom has assembled a diverse and attentive staff, representative of the well-deserved reputation enjoyed by the five franchised Ace Hardware locations in D.C. for providing a welcoming environment and helpful customer assistance.

With the store’s early success, it would be easy for Stom to overlook the 19 months of relentless challenges bringing the business to fruition and laboriously managing the city’s often cumbersome permitting and regulatory maze. Informed by her former federal government project management experience, she would advise city officials to further streamline the path to small business development. She recommends assigning case managers to assist in detailing the intricate sequencing and extensive regulatory requirements for opening a local business. Otherwise, licensing delays are common, backward steps are necessary, costs increase and obstacles breed failure.

When a businessperson invests all she is worth utilizing every available financial resource — and, in Stom’s case, humbly accepting self-initiated investment offers by supportive residents eager to see the business meet the significant capitalization final funding in a tight commercial lending environment — she is making a commitment to both an aspiration and a community, to both economic development and employment creation. She also takes on the resulting responsibilities and risks.

Whether it’s a local homeowner grabbing a big bag of bark chips for a flowerbed landscaping project, a nearby resident popping in for an extra can of Benjamin Moore paint to finish refreshing the kitchen, two young apartment dwellers grabbing light bulbs and vacuum cleaner bags, or a novice needing guidance and tools for a home project — a neighborhood has become more complete and self-sustaining.

All because of a woman’s courage and vision — and that first circular saw.

Mark Lee is a local small business manager and long-time community business advocate. Reach him at [email protected].

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Why I’m supporting Gary Goodweather for D.C. mayor

In a word, longtime local resident has the character for the job

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Gary Goodweather (Washington Blade photo by Michael Key)

Hey fellow LGBTQ+ Democrats, this is worth reading! Especially if you’re a voter in Washington, D.C. who’s planning to cast a ballot for the nomination of local candidates in the District of Columbia in 2026.

Because next Tuesday June 16 is a really Big Deal for D.C. Democrats. It’s the first time in two decades that the doors to filling the crucially important job of mayor are wide open because no incumbent is on the ballot. 

That is, Mayor Muriel Bowser is not running for election. Instead she will — at last, and after three terms in office — symbolically ride off into the political sunset. And to considerable and well deserved applause. Because she’s been rightly lauded for many important accomplishments, including her well documented record of supporting the many diverse issues concerning the LGBTQ+ community. 

But she’s been equally derided for her far too spineless a record recently, of (not) effectively opposing President Donald Trump and his outrageous stationing of outsider National Guard armed troops all across D.C. This despicably sad state of affairs has been a grim statement that Washington, D.C. (not being a state) is subject to the Donald’s feral instincts for nastily mean-spirited retributions. But she’s been meek and mild, and even actively complicit with Trump, when other mayors have told Trump to buzz off. And they succeeded.

But enough about Mayor Bowser. Her “sell by date” fast approaches. The old order changes. And a new day dawns. 

Next Tuesday, two candidates of this old (and by now seriously outmoded) order seek to win the coveted Democratic nomination for mayor on June 16.  First, there’s Janeese Lewis George, who’s a great first or second choice by any measure. And (ahem) then there’s Kenyan McDuffie.

But this is Ranked Choice Voting and it’s brand new. It’s not “either/or” binary, just like we now appreciate that sexual orientation and identity are also non-binary.  

My first choice is clear because I know him. His name is Gary Goodweather. But so, who is this outsider candidate for mayor anyway?

It goes like this. First, together with his remarkable wife, successful D.C. Realtor Meredith Margolis, Gary and their two college age kids are all 20-year residents of Dupont Circle.  I actually first met Gary and Meredith a year ago at a BBQ event, when he was a speaker at the historic, progressive, feminist Woman’s National Democratic Club. 

So once again, who’s this Gary Goodweather? And why should you seriously consider him for your personal first or second or even third choice?

Here’s why.  He’s new to politics in the conventional old paradigm of “politics.” But he knows Washington, D.C. forwards and backwards and inside and out. Because he’s been involved for many years in successful local private sector business investments, including the development of neighborhood-based BIDs, or Business Improvement Districts including the one in NoMa.

And his thinking is typically “out-of-the box.” For example, he’s currently an actual active advocate for establishing agriculture in our densely populated urban environment —  through so-called “tiered gardens.” Yes, D.C., trust me, this is an actual thing. And yes, it requires street smarts to deal with challenging zoning issues; but it’s a real example of what fresh blood and new thinking and real imagination can bring to our hogtied and often over-regulated city.

Gary was in the U.S. Army and the National Guard for four years as a captain in the armored command.  He earned his MBA in finance from Johns Hopkins University in night school. 

If elected, Gary would be D.C.’s first Jewish mayor. (His is Reform Judaism. Repair the breach!)

He’s become my friend and I admire his intelligence and diligence and imagination and in a word his character. 

Here’s what he said to me about what he calls his political North Star: “All D.C. residents should be protected, regardless of who they love. Love is love. Love who you want. Identify how you choose to be.”

Look, it’s always time for good weather in our city. Maybe it’s time for Gary Goodweather as mayor too. First choice or second choice. Then let’s all see what happens next.


David Hoffman is a freelance writer and retired federal government civil servant. He is a longtime resident of the H Street Northeast corridor. He is a member of both the Woman’s National Democratic Club and DSA, Democratic Socialists of America Metro DC chapter. 

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Don’t just vote for change — vote for Hope Solomon for mayor

LGBTQ community isn’t separate from Washington’s story — it is our story

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Hope Solomon

My name is Hope Solomon, and I’m running for mayor of Washington, D.C.

I’ve spent my entire life here. I attended D.C. Public Schools. I grew up working in my family’s small business here in D.C. I live in Dupont Circle. For 17 years, I worked in national security with the Department of Defense, FBI, and Department of Homeland Security. Then last July, I got DOGE’d by Elon Musk.

I don’t recommend it as a career strategy.

But it did give me something I hadn’t had in a long time: perspective.

For the first time in years, I had space to slow down and ask a simple question: Why does it feel like Washington is being run by the same small group of people playing musical chairs, while everyone else is just expected to live with the results?

That’s when I decided to run.

I wasn’t raised in Washington’s political circles. I was raised in Washington. There’s a difference.

Some of my earliest memories are going to see the AIDS Quilt on the National Mall with my mother. I didn’t fully understand it at the time, but I understood enough to know it mattered—because it made something the country had been trying not to see completely impossible to ignore.

My family’s version of a home-cooked meal has always been Annie’s or Mr. Henry’s. I grew up going to Pride, the High Heel Race, drag brunches, and drag shows. As a kid, I thought that was just what cities were like—sequins, show tunes, queens, neighbors, everything mixed together.

Turns out that wasn’t every city.

It was Washington.

The arts shaped me just as much as anything else. I started at Fillmore Arts Center, trained for years with the Washington School of Ballet, and performed across the city—from the Kennedy Center to Warner Theatre to Lisner Auditorium.

The arts taught me discipline and confidence. But more than that, they taught me something Washington has always understood: A city works when people are free to be exactly who they are.

Growing up here, LGBTQ+ Washingtonians were my neighbors, my teachers, fellow business owners, artists, friends, and family.

They helped build the Washington I know.

And that’s why this moment matters.

Washington is facing a budget crisis. Small businesses are struggling. The federal government is openly hostile toward our city. But what worries me most isn’t just policy—it’s whether we lose what makes Washington itself while trying to fix it.

Because the soul of this city is in places like Annie’s. It’s in neighborhood restaurants, small theaters, Pride celebrations, independent businesses, and the people who make this city feel like home.

As mayor, I’ll fight to protect that. I’ll stand up for LGBTQ+ rights, support LGBTQ+ youth, invest in the arts, strengthen public safety, and back the small businesses that keep our neighborhoods alive.

Most importantly, I’ll lead with the understanding that the LGBTQ+ community isn’t separate from Washington’s story.

It is Washington’s story.

If you want another career politician, you’ve got plenty of options.

If you want someone who was shaped by this city, believes in this city, and is ready to fight for this city, I’m asking for your vote.

Learn more at HopeForDC.com. On Election Day, don’t just vote for change. Vote for Hope.


Hope Solomon is a candidate for D.C. mayor.

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Vote Kenyan McDuffie for D.C. mayor

He will best protect D.C.’s interests amid federal meddling

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Kenyan McDuffie (Washington Blade file photo by Michael Key)

Elections are always important, but this year in D.C. they will bring major changes. Because of that, your vote in the Democratic primary on June 16 is more important than ever. D.C. is so overwhelmingly Democratic it is a near certainty the winners in the Democratic primary will win the general election. So, I urge everyone eligible, take the time to vote. 

D.C. makes it very easy. Every registered voter has received a ballot in the mail. I cast mine before I left for a vacation. When you read this don’t put your ballot in the mail, rather vote at an early voting location, or put your ballot in one of the drop boxes around the city, or vote in person on June 16. You can find the locations for these options nearest you by going to the DCBOE website.

This year for the first time D.C.is dealing with rank choice voting, and who you rank second, or third, can make a difference in the outcome. It is important to note that you don’t have to rank the candidates. You can bullet vote for the one you like, or rank up to five. If there is one or more you like, you can simply choose a #1 and #2. Again, there is no requirement that you rank more people. From what I am seeing, in most of the races, even if five, six, or more, are running and listed on the ballot, in most of those races it will come down to one or two who have any chance. The way the city handles giving out our public money, it will cost us a lot of taxpayer dollars for all those people with no chance at all to win. I hope after these elections the Council will take a close look at how we do our public financing, and reform it. I am all for public financing, just not at the rate D.C. does it. We must ensure anyone who gets city money, accounts for every penny of it. It should never be spent on personal items. If it is not all used, it needs to be refunded to the city.

I have not made endorsements in every race, but clearly the most important race this year in D.C. is for mayor. After 12 years of Muriel Bowser serving as our mayor, there will be someone new sitting in that office after Jan. 1, 2027. What people must remember when voting for mayor, is the person we elect, even if Democrats take back Congress, and I think we will, must continue dealing with the felon in the White House for the first two years of their term. We have seen doing that requires the skill to walk a tightrope. While fighting him on nearly all he is doing, it’s crucial the mayor understands they must not alienate him to the point where he goes all out to attack the city, and the residents here. Remember, home rule gives the felon in the White House, and Congress, enormous power over us. Congress gets to review all our legislation, and our budgets, before they become law. The president controls the D.C. National Guard, and the federal agencies that in many cases get involved, and impact the work of our city. That includes housing, parks, the MPD, and others. There is only one person on the ballot who fully understands that, and has shown, by word and action, they know how to deal with him in the way that will benefit all the people in our city. That person is Kenyan McDuffie. I urge your #1 vote for him. If you have decided to vote for one of the other candidates, I would hope you would list him on your ballot as #2. 

Then for Democratic Council-at-large I urge you to consider a #1 vote for Kevin Chavous. Then Brian Schwalb for Attorney General, Phil Mendelson for Council Chair, and Brooke Pinto for delegate to Congress. For Ward 5 Council I recommend Zachary Parker. For Democratic Party slots, I urge a vote for all those running on the Democrats United for a Free D.C. slate. 

Then for the Independent Council-at-Large seat I urge a vote for Jacque Patterson or if you vote for Doni Crawford, rank Jacque #2. 

Again, the results of this election will determine the future of the District of Columbia. It is the most important election here in years. I urge everyone who can vote in the primary to do so. Your vote can make a difference to you, and all your neighbors. 


Peter Rosenstein is a longtime LGBTQ rights and Democratic Party activist.

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