This past spring, restaurateur Aaron Gordon had an idea for a lifeboat. A handful of well-known D.C. chefs would converge under one roof, devote a 6,000-square-foot former restaurant solely to preparation for takeout and delivery, and use!-->…
Six years ago, Keener-Squire Properties delivered The Drake, a 218-unit apartment building on the First Baptist Church's property in the 1600 block of O Street NW. Now, the church is looking to add another site and more units to their!-->…
When the coronavirus pandemic swept across North America in March, it closed schools, businesses, restaurants and fitness centers, forcing many people to work from home and limit their mixing in society.
Washingtonian Jameon Gray spent 17 years in prison. Because D.C. doesn’t have its own prison system, Gray was shuffled through federal institutions across the country. His family couldn’t visit for years at a time — an eight-hour drive to!-->…
The D.C. Police Reform Commission has hired an outside consultant to help examine police practices and the criminal justice system. Impact Justice, a research center based in D.C. and Oakland, California, will provide assistance in the!-->…
A federal judge has vacated a rule by the Trump administration that potentially would have cut off Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits to more than 20,000 D.C. residents and hundreds of thousands of people across the!-->…
News Release — DC Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton
October 20, 2020
Contact: Sharon Eliza Nichols
WASHINGTON, D.C. – Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-DC), chair of the Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) Judicial Nominations!-->!-->!-->!-->!-->!-->!-->…
News Release — Executive Office of the Mayor and the DC Department of Health
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
October 20, 2020
CONTACT:
LaToya Foster (EOM)
Dr. Kimberly Henderson (DC Health)
DC Becomes First Jurisdiction to Use!-->!-->!-->!-->!-->!-->!-->!-->!-->!-->!-->!-->!-->…
Happy Monday. DC officials are urging residents to opt into a new mobile contact tracing program, which launches tomorrow on iPhone and Android phones in the city.
Starting today, residents of the D.C. area may spot helicopters flying at rather low altitudes above the city and surrounding region ahead of the presidential inauguration.
A helicopter flying low over the Washington area on Monday was measuring naturally occurring background radiation as part of security efforts for the Jan. 20 presidential inauguration, according to the U.S. Department of Energy’s National!-->…
News Release — DC Office of the Attorney General
October 19, 2020
MEDIA CONTACT:
Office of Communications
Federal Judge Ruled USDA’s ‘Arbitrary and Capricious’ Food Stamp Rule Change Defied Rulemaking Procedure and!-->!-->!-->!-->!-->!-->!-->!-->!-->…
The National Gallery of Art will reopen more galleries next week, but for the first winter in 20 years it will not reopen its popular ice-skating rink in the Sculpture Garden.
A federal judge on Sunday formally struck down a Trump administration attempt to end food stamp benefits for nearly 700,000 unemployed people, blocking as “arbitrary and capricious” the first of three such planned measures to restrict the!-->…