Some eviction filings for nonpayment of rent will resume Tuesday in D.C., as the city winds down a moratorium on evictions that helped keep thousands of renters in their homes for more than a year and a half.
WASHINGTON — Some of the greatest names to emerge from the maiden era of hip hop and rap joined together for a night of revelry and reflection at Northeast DC's Ivy City Smokehouse Friday night.
Monday is National Indigenous Peoples Day as well as Columbus Day, and at the Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian in D.C., the focus was on elevating the voices of the Black Indigenous community.
More than $649 million in emergency funds intended to help struggling renters in the Washington area pay overdue bills and avoid eviction was distributed ahead of a Sept. 30th use-it-or-lose-it federal deadline, a Washington Post analysis!-->…
The country’s third largest subway system, once a public transit gem, suffered greatly thanks to a fragmented funding structure. Now, a regional effort to save the system is working, but COVID-19 presents a new hurdle.
Ida flooded roads and knocked out power in the region. Heavy rains in September trapped cars, closed roads, and flooded the Dupont Metro station. Rains have continued to grow more intense, as the region had its wettest year on record in!-->…
Torie Partridge, a former Army counterterrorism analyst and Arabic language analyst at BAE Systems, is founder of Brookland’s Terratorie, which produces and sells custom city maps, stationary and gift boxes. It was formerly known as Cherry!-->…
As recently as 1973, homosexuality was considered a “sexual deviancy” and gay people were classified as mentally ill by the American Psychiatric Association (APA).
The LGBTQ+ community and its allies have activists such as Barbara!-->!-->!-->…
News Release — Executive Office of the Mayor
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
October 11, 2021
CONTACT:
LaToya Foster (EOM)
(WASHINGTON, DC) – Today, Mayor Muriel Bowser announced a series of transitions!-->!-->!-->!-->!-->!-->!-->!-->!-->!-->!-->…
Elderly Washingtonians are falling victim to predatory — and often unlicensed — investors, developers, and scammers looking to profit off of their homes.
The Kennedy Center and its stagehands union said Saturday they had reached a new three-year agreement, averting a potential strike that would've disrupted this week's debut of the musical "Hadestown" at the performing arts center and!-->…
The chance to redevelop 80 acres in Northwest D.C. doesn’t exactly come along every day, so it’s no small matter that the redevelopment of the Armed Forces Retirement Home is finally moving forward.