33 Groups Call for Improvements in Final RFK Stadium Legislation

For Immediate Release

September 10, 2025

For More Information Contact: 

Chris Weiss, DC Environmental Network, 202-754-7088

Lora Nunn, RFK Future Task Force, 703-945-9057


33 Groups Call for Improvements in Final RFK Stadium Legislation

More Details and Guarantees Needed for Housing Development, Community Benefits, Environmental Protection and More

September 10, 2025 – 33 groups are calling on the DC Council to amend the RFK stadium legislation when it votes on September 17, so that commitments to support the community – especially in housing, environment, community benefits and green space – are fully reflected and guaranteed in the final legislation.

The August 1 vote on the RFK legislation included several community-focused provisions, such as requiring union labor for construction of the stadium and much of the surrounding development. Yet the legislative language lacks clarity in several places or falls short of locking in key commitments made by the Commanders. The initial legislative vote also includes provisions that run contrary to long-standing DC policy and should be changed, such as allowing the destruction of more than 30 heritage trees.

The groups call for the following legislative changes to strengthen accountability:

  • Spell out elements of the Community Benefits Agreement and make it enforceable 

  • Specify housing and affordable housing commitments and enforceable timeline

  • Create meaningful incentives to ensure timely housing and commercial development 

  • Comply with and strengthen sustainability standards, especially around clean energy, protecting the Anacostia River, limiting waste at the stadium, and increasing Metro capacity before opening day

  • Protect RFK's Heritage Trees

  • Guarantee Fair Market Rent for commercial development beyond the stadium

  • Ensure 30% Green Space set aside is real and fully accessible to the public 

“The heavily subsidized stadium deal was premised on spurring housing and commercial development, yet the Commanders would pay only insignificant penalties for missing deadlines, and not for 30 years,” said Nick Sementelli of the No Billionaire’s Playground Coalition

“Few things benefit a community more than a healthy, robust, and nurturing natural environment," said Chris Williams, President of the Anacostia Watershed Society, “The RFK stadium deal should include specific commitments to invest in environmental and natural resources protection, as well as drive meaningful compliance with existing environmental laws.”

“Stadium proponents said a stadium will be great for DC -- on housing, the environment, jobs, city finances, and more,” said Chris Weiss, Executive Director of the DC Environmental Network. “We need the Council to pass a deal that reflects that, by locking in all commitments and ensuring this mega-project doesn't harm the environment or overwhelm the Kingman Park community."

“Residents need a real seat at the table for the months and years to come, so exemptions and exceptions can’t be granted later on promises made today,” said Claire Mills at CCAN Action Fund. 

“To avoid a worse future of more trash, traffic, and pollution, the DC Council must ensure this stadium deal is a true model for sustainable development,” said Mike Litt, chair of the Sierra Club DC Chapter. “That means backing up promises with firm commitments for less waste and parking, and more clean energy and reliable transit.”

“Trees are one of the many reasons Washington, DC is such a great place to live and their shade will benefit both our residents and the thousands of people visiting the stadium for events throughout the year.” said Andrew Schichtel, Executive Director of Casey Trees. “That’s why it’s so critical that the DC Council ensure the site is subject to the existing tree laws that every other Washingtonian must adhere to.”

“The Mayor and Commanders committed to developing 6,000 housing units, with 1,800 affordable, but that doesn’t show up anywhere in the legislation.  Let’s lock that down,” said Ed Lazere of the No Billionaire’s Playground Coalition.

The detailed list of requests can be found here. All signed organizations support efforts to improve the RFK stadium deal, but each organization is not necessarily advocating for every recommendation listed here.


Statement Sponsors:
American Economic Liberties Project, Anacostia Parks and Community Collaborative, Anacostia Watershed Society, Beautify DC, Black Led Zero Waste Coalition, Campaign to Reduce Lead Exposure and Asthma, Capital Nature, Casey Trees, Campaign for Lead Free Water, CCAN Action Fund, City Wildlife, Climate Institute, Committee of 100 on the Federal City, Dark Sky DC, DC Climate Action, DC Environmental Network, DC Fiscal Policy Institute, DC for Democracy, DC Voters for Animals, EARTHDAY.org, Elderly Tenants Associations Presidents and Presenters, Fair Budget Coalition, Friends of Kenilworth Aquatic Gardens, Friends of Kingman & Heritage Islands, Nature Forward, No Billionaire’s Playground, RFK Future Task Force, Sierra Club DC Chapter, Ward 8 Woods, Warriors Empowering District Communities, Washington Parks & People, Wentworth Green Strategies, and Washington Interfaith Network.

Strengthening Accountability in the RFK Stadium Legislation

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Hold City Council Accountable and Support the CBA