Federal agency cancels plans to close DC park during WorldPride

The National Park Service reversed plans to close the park in Dupont Circle during the WorldPride parade this coming weekend, according to two local councilmembers.

The Park Service announced Monday evening that the park would be closed during festivities this coming weekend, according to multiple outlets, but the councilmembers said they spoke to Metropolitan Police Chief Pamela Smith on Tuesday morning and convinced her to reverse the decision.

“I spoke with Chief Smith this morning and I’m glad to report that the decision to close DuPont Circle Park is being rescinded. The Park is central to the lgbtq community, and neighbors will be able to enjoy it this year for World Pride,” DC Councilmember Zachary Parker (D-Ward 5) said in a post on X Tuesday.

DC Councilmember Brooke Pinto (D-Ward 2) similarly said on X she worked with Smith and other members of the community and “am thrilled to share the decision to close the Dupont Circle Park has been reversed.”

“People celebrating World Pride will be able to gather safely in the symbol of our city’s historic LGBTQ+ community,” she wrote.

“I am grateful for MPD’s efforts to keep DC residents and visitors safe while also ensuring Dupont Circle remains central to the festivities. Let’s all remember to treat all of our neighbors and public spaces with respect and care this weekend — vandalism or violence will not be tolerated.”

Parker told The Washington Post that, in his conversations with Smith, she stressed that the decision to close the park was hers, not the federal government’s. Smith made the decision over concerns related to safety, property damage and police resources, Parker told the Post.

Smith added that police will need to be reallocated to the park over the weekend to make sure it can stay open, Parker told the Post.

Parker said in his interview with the Post that he conveyed the importance of the park to the LGBTQ community and, “And the chief, to her credit, took a lot of that to heart and found an alternative way to keep the park open.”

In the statement Monday evening, a spokesperson for the Park Service said the decision to close the park was made at the request of DC police to help “keep the community and visitors safe and protect one of D.C.’s most treasured public spaces.”

He also noted that the decision adhered to President Trump’s executive order on protecting federal monuments, the Post reported.