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Trump’s DC beautification push navigates troubled waters

(CNN) — At a ceremony in front of the iconic cascading fountain at Meridian Hill Park in Washington, DC, earlier this month, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and top US officials touted President Donald Trump’s efforts to make the city “safe and beautiful.”

But less than two weeks later, the historic park that served as Hegseth’s backdrop has become the latest hurdle President Donald Trump is facing in his mission to give the nation’s capital a facelift, as the water in the 13-basin fountain has turned into a murky, rust-orange hue.

The fountain had been devoid of water for seven years before the Trump administration repaired and reopened it in May in a $4 million renovation that delighted residents. After the renovation, residents flocked to the park in the evenings, sitting on the steps bordering the fountain, having picnics, and reading books.

But this week, parkgoers observed a brown color overtaking the reservoirs.

“It looks like mud,” said James Langan, a New York resident visiting DC.

The fixture at Meridian Hill Park is one of nine fountains being returned to service under Trump’s March 2025 executive order calling to make DC “safe and beautiful” coinciding with preparations for the nation’s 250th anniversary. When CNN visited the nine fountains scattered across DC this week, only one appeared to still be inoperable, and two had brown-colored water.

Some residents and visitors said they welcomed running water at Meridian Hill Park, despite the coloring.

“Whenever I’d like come here before, I was kind of disappointed that the water was never on, and it was kind of like overrun with trash,” Washington, DC, resident Jedi Sworobuk told CNN. “I think it’s nice to have, especially in the heat in the summer.”

The Interior Department told CNN on Tuesday evening that the brown water at Meridian Hill Park is “sediment as a result of the reopening of two water lines that had been out of service for some time,” noting it expected the water to run clean in the next 24 to 36 hours.

A CNN crew observed workers cleaning the cascading basins on Wednesday, following social media buzz about the browning water.

On Saturday, the pools of water were still murky, but less orange.

The Interior Department did not respond to a request for comment on Saturday on the state of the Meridian Hill fountain, and on the fountains at the General Philip Sheridan statue in Sheridan Circle, which were inactive.

The fountain at Meridian Hill Park caught the attention of Alexandra McKenna, a London resident who traveled to DC and made the park a stop on her trip.

“It looks pretty gross,” McKenna said, laughing.

McKenna pointed to the water at the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool, which has also generated headlines in recent weeks, adding, “It’s kind of a thing going on in Washington at the moment.”

The Meridian Hill Park scramble comes after the Reflecting Pool saga dominated conversations in Washington. After Trump called for the pool’s renovation in April, the more than $14 million project has taken on a lifecycle of draining, painting, filling and peeling.

Trump alleged vandals gashed the pool’s lining. In recent weeks, at least three people were charged with destruction of property after allegedly removing pieces of blue paint from the pool, and a former Olympian was indicted on that allegation. The canoeist, David Hearn, pleaded not guilty.

During a May Cabinet meeting, Trump said most of the fountains were in final stages or fixed.

In his recent July Fourth address on the National Mall, Trump declared the city “safe, gleaming, and beautiful again,” though some beautification projects, like the Reflecting Pool, appear to be in progress.

The National Park Service said work to restore and rehabilitate historic landscapes will occur in phases, noting that the public may experience closures or limited access at certain sites.

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Long-held phone-free policy at bar proves to be ahead of its time

Click here for updates on this story    SAN FRANCISCO (KPIX) -- The secret word you say quietly after pressing a nondescript buzzer in San Francisco's Tenderloin District doesn't just open a door.It opens a portal into another time, when passwords granted access to hidden rooms, and liquor flowed freely even while the law insisted otherwise. Back then, alcohol was prohibited. Today? It's your phone.Inside Bourbon & Branch, a bar built inside one of the city's original Prohibition-era speakeasies, the cocktails are stiff, the lights glow amber, and conversations happen face to face. It looks like 1924. In many ways, it feels like it too."We just ask that you speak easy and don't use cell phones while you're with us," the hostess tells customers as she seats them, menus already in hand.When new owners took over in 2006, they kept everything that made the place what it was, the dark wood, the amber light, the hidden doors and added one more rule: No phones. "People are really looking for a way to engage with each other and get away from that constant need and desire to be looking at your phone," said General Manager Anastacia Cortez.Cortez, who admits she was one of the last people to get a smartphone and still regrets it, said the phone-free policy wasn't a gimmick. It was a philosophy.Turns out, Bourbon & Branch was ahead of its time. In cities across the country, bars and restaurants are now enforcing the same rule. A 2025 survey from Talker Research found that 63% of Gen Z intentionally disconnect from their devices, making the generation that grew up online the very one now leading the charge to log off.Addison Sutton, out for the night with friends, said putting the phone away isn't as easy as it sounds. But the 24-year-old said he wasn't worried about the withdrawals. "I have alcohol to fix that," Sutton said. The original speakeasy, which still holds all of its original secret exits, was built so patrons could vanish if police came calling. CEO Brian Sheehy, said the no-phone rule has always been about preservation. Not just of the bar's history, but of the experience itself.Prohibition may be long over. But contraband, it seems, is alive and well.First-time phone offenders get a polite reminder. Repeat offenders will get shown the exit, and not the secret one. "When you're trying to put on the ultimate hospitality experience, you have to minimize the number of distractions to your guests and to your colleagues," he said. "It really come down to hospitality."Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.
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