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In memory: Bill Sittig, a community streets, parks and streams activist

February 24, 2023 by FHC 7 Comments

Bill Sittig provided this photo to Forest Hills Connection when he ran in an ANC 3F special election in 2017.

by Marlene Berlin

William J. Sittig, a longtime and active member of the Van Ness/Forest Hills community, died on February 10th. He was 80 years old.

I knew him as a fellow community activist and a friend. And to his friends and neighbors, he was Bill.

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Bill Sittig was one of the original members of ANC 3F’s Van Ness Vision Committee, which was established in 2013 and was precursor to today’s Van Ness Main Street. Mary Beth Ray, headed this committee and served with him on the ANC’s Parks and Trails Committee.

“Bill was passionate about our beautiful neighborhood,” said Ray, “and his enthusiasm extended to both the vibrancy of our commercial corridor and the natural beauty of Soapstone and Rock Creek Park. He was a warm and friendly presence at meetings, and he always had a kind word for others. He will surely be missed by friends and neighbors alike!”

Bill Sittig and Jakopchek organized a cleanup in 2017 of a particularly challenging section of Soapstone Valley Park, a steep slope at the east end of Windom Place. (Bill was said to be very proud of their haul). Pointing at one of their “prizes” (L-R): Rob Fox, Pat Jakopchek, Bill Sittig, Rebecca Fox.

Bill also served as an ANC 3F commissioner from 2017 through 2018. Pat Jakopchek was the chair at the time, and remembers him has “a kind, thoughtful, and selfless individual who was committed to improving our community and believed in local government’s ability and responsibility to make that happen.”

I had the pleasure of serving with him as a commissioner on ANC 3F. Bill was so invested in his work that, on the night he won his special election, he asked us to pass a resolution empowering him to officially advocate on behalf of Murch Elementary School at an upcoming hearing being held before he could be formally sworn in. It passed unanimously.

Bill was always willing to lend a hand to anyone who needed it. He went above and beyond to make our neighborhood a better place to live. He helped lead subcommittees focused on improving our streets and sidewalks, and parks and trails, and later served on the taskforce that redistricted ANCs across Ward 3.

But Bill’s contributions went beyond these visible efforts. He was a great listener, always eager to discuss my day job in politics or hear stories about my kids. Bill’s passing is a loss for our entire community and I, like so many others, will miss the joy and friendship he brought to it.

I discovered one of Bill’s less-visible efforts one day in 2020. He was collecting water samples from Soapstone Creek.

The author, collecting a water sample in the Soapstone Valley. (photo by Marlene Berlin)

He explained he was working as a volunteer for a creekwater testing program overseen by the DC Department of Energy and the Environment, and he agreed to write an article about the testing effort and its findings. So Bill was the first to report in Forest Hills Connection on the very high and unsafe levels of E. coli in Soapstone and other Rock Creek tributaries.

A couple of years later, Bill and I began working together to advocate for the inclusion of senior living residences and senior services in DDOT outreach on its Connecticut Avenue Reversible Lane, Safety and Operations Study.

Before we could proceed further, Bill’s wife of 49 years, Divna Todorovich, died suddenly in November 2022. He was devastated. We emailed back and forth, and I brought him food. After a period with no contact, Bill emailed that he’d had a stroke and was rehabbing with his son, Alexander, in Kensington. He expected to be back in the neighborhood at some point, but it was not to be. My friend and fellow activist was gone.

I was left with many memories.

My favorite memory of Bill is comparing notes on a same hiking trip we each took to Peru, a year apart. It took us up the Salkantay Pass at 15,090 feet. I found getting up to that height on our own steam and oxygen the roughest part of the trip. Bill found coming down a very steep grade the next day the toughest. He did it in 2016, when he would have been 74 years old. I can only hope to keep up with his hiking prowess.

And I will miss Bill’s presence in our neighborhood.

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Filed Under: Featured, Meet the Neighbors, News, Parks and Streams

Comments

  1. Mary Beth Ray says

    February 24, 2023 at 9:06 am

    What a beautiful tribute to Bill. Thank you Marlene to keeping us together as a community, in life and in death.

    Reply
  2. David Jonas Bardin says

    February 24, 2023 at 10:31 am

    Bill Sittig was a graceful and splendid human being. May his memory be a blessing.

    He was always open to public service.

    For example, one of his careers was on the Library of Congress staff. Thanks to Bill’s post-retirement advice, LOC now owns important book which U.S. Department of Energy may consult to protect DC and our region from catastrophe.

    May good memories of Bill Sittig last all the rest of our lives.

    Reply
  3. George Hofmann says

    February 25, 2023 at 6:12 am

    I am very sorry to hear that Mr. Sittig has died. I knew him when he was an ANC Commissoner and he was, as those who commented, a compassionate and caring individual, and a great neighbor. Sadly these gifts were not appreciated by all in his own district, where he was ill-served by a few.

    Reply
  4. Marjorie Share says

    February 25, 2023 at 2:12 pm

    Yours is a beautiful tribute, Marlene. Thank you for providing this forum. Bill had a winning sense of humor, a keen mind and a heart of gold. I always cherished our discussions as well as serving together on ANC Park Committees and Van Ness Main Street initiatives. He left no stone unturned.

    I miss that glint in his eye and the potential for spontaneous, meaningful conversation, whether in front of Bread Furst, at the farmers market or at the Albemarle Soapstone outfall. He was a pillar of our Community.

    Reply
  5. Alex Sittig says

    February 27, 2023 at 2:21 pm

    Thank you for the beautiful tribute to my father, Marlene. And thank you and Pat for attending the memorial reception this past Saturday. It means a lot to me and I know my father would greatly appreciate it as well.

    My father loved the Van Ness/Forrest Hills area. He lived here for almost 50 years, and has been visiting family here since the early 1950s. I would love hearing stories of him going to the Hot Shoppe and bowling alley down our street (Yuma) as a kid, and how the neighborhood has changed so much throughout the decades.

    Just to clarify, my father passed away due to complications from a glioblastoma. We first discovered the tumor when he had what we thought was a stroke, but it wound up being a seizure caused by the brain tumor. Probably a little too much info, but I just want to set the record straight.

    Reply
  6. Frances Wu says

    March 1, 2023 at 3:13 pm

    Wonderful tribute to Bill and what he meant to our community. As his friend and next door neighbor, I miss him so!

    Reply
  7. Mary Alice Levine says

    March 4, 2023 at 11:00 pm

    I met Bill last year while he and I were working on the Ward 3 ANC Redistricting Task Force. I got to know him when He came to my house to look at maps a few times.. He ate cookies with me and my husband and talked a lot about Forest Hills and his son.

    It seemed like you had a nice relationship with your Dad, Alex. And he was proud of you.

    And Bill often spoke of you, Marlene, and of the Forest Hill Connection. He admired you a great deal.

    I also found Bill to be a very good man, very friendly, and very thoughtful about his obligations to his community and friends.

    I wish I had known of his troubles before now.

    Mary Alice

    Reply

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