• Thursday, July 9, 2026

TheDCLine.org TheDCLine.org - Local News, Views & Events

  • Home
  • About
    • Mission Statement
    • Contact
  • News
    • Built Environment
    • Civic Calendar
    • District government
    • Elections
    • Health
    • Natural Environment
    • Schools
  • Features
    • Arts and Culture
    • Art
    • Books
    • Dance
    • DC History
    • Films
    • Galleries and museums
    • Music
    • Upcoming Events
  • Calendar
    • Classes/Workshops
    • Community Meetings
    • Concerts
    • Discussions and Lectures
    • Family Programs
    • Films
    • Performances
    • Public Hearings
  • Opinion
  • Newsletter
  • Donate
TheDCLine.org
  • Home
  • Editor
  • Page 166

Author

Editor 25036 posts 0 comments

DCist: WMATA Selects New General Manager To Lead Transit Agency Through Turbulent Time

Editor May 10, 2022
Randy Clarke, a public transit CEO from Austin, Texas, is WMATA’s new general manager. He will face a series of challenges getting the country’s second-largest transit agency back on track.

Washington Post: Metro hires new general manager amid pandemic, safety challenges

Editor May 10, 2022
Randy Clarke will replace Paul J. Wiedefeld, who has served as top executive for six years and will retire this summer

Washington Post: D.C. hasn’t reported daily covid case counts to the CDC since April 27

Editor May 10, 2022
The D.C. health department has not shared data with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention since April 27 on the number of new coronavirus cases in the District or on any deaths from the virus, as cases inch upward again elsewhere…

Washington Post: Washington Post wins Pulitzer Prize for public service for Jan. 6 coverage

Editor May 9, 2022
More than 100 journalists contributed to reporting on the Capitol insurrection that was honored by the Pulitzer Prize’s most prestigious award.

DCist: Penn Social Reopens As A Concert Hall And Coffeehouse, With A Side Of Podcasting

Editor May 9, 2022
A new concert hall and coffeehouse is coming to downtown D.C., but under a familiar name: Penn Social.

City Paper: Mendelson Courts a Budget Battle Over Affordable Housing and Homelessness

Editor May 9, 2022
The Council chairman’s proposed changes could make a difference for recently homeless families.

DCist: More Money For At-Risk Students And Housing Vouchers Included In Mendelson’s Budget Amendment

Editor May 9, 2022
D.C. schools with a high percentage of low-income students would see a boost in funding under a proposal from D.C. Council Chairman Phil Mendelson. The chairman announced his proposal ahead of a first vote on the city’s 2023 budget set for…

DCist: Incensed By Ticket Prices, D.C. Activists Plan Competing Concert To Pharrell’s Something In…

Editor May 9, 2022
D.C. residents were understandably excited when megaproducer Pharrell Williams announced that he would be bringing some “happiness” to the District on Juneteenth by relocating Something in the Water, his major Virginia Beach music…

Caleb Francois in The Post: George Washington University needs a new name

Editor May 9, 2022
Last year, George Washington University’s Cloyd Heck Marvin Center — named for a segregationist — was renamed the University Student Center in response to student calls for a name change. The name change streamlined with calls for racial…

Washington Business Journal: JPMorgan Chase to bring another 70 branches to D.C. region, open new…

Editor May 9, 2022
JPMorgan Chase & Co. (NYSE: JPM) will establish another 70 branches in D.C., Maryland and Virginia by the end of 2025 as part of a sizable retail banking expansion in the region, where it also opened its long-planned Mid-Atlantic…

WTOP: Metro sees ridership increase but remains lower than before pandemic

Editor May 9, 2022
As gas prices climbed across the D.C. region in early March and more offices reopened, more people hopped on Metro trains and buses, according to the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority.

DCist: New Bill Would Prohibit D.C. From Cooperating With Other States’ Investigations Into…

Editor May 9, 2022
A new bill introduced in the D.C. Council would prohibit the city from cooperating in any investigation led by another state into anyone who gets, assists with, or performs an abortion in D.C.

DCist: Metro Says Ridership Is 40% Above Predictions — Which Means More Crowded Trains

Editor May 9, 2022
Metro says riders are returning at higher rates than they anticipated.

Washington Post: Metro says ridership is outpacing transit agency projections

Editor May 9, 2022
This means good news for its finances but riders are growing frustrated over increased crowding

WTOP: Catholic University responds to lawsuit seeking ownership of ‘Wizard of Oz’ dress

Editor May 7, 2022
The Wicked Witch of the West in “The Wizard of Oz” movie wanted the ruby slippers, but a Wisconsin woman says she wants Dorothy’s dress that was recently found at Catholic University in D.C. because it belongs to her.

Washington Post: Adams Morgan mourns a man who died homeless, steps from his childhood home

Editor May 7, 2022
Miguel Gonzales spent his life in Adams Morgan. He grew up in a condominium on Adams Mill Road. He attended Oyster-Adams middle school and played basketball at Walter Pierce Park. He worked as a porter at a hotel a short walk across the…

WTOP: Proposed bill would make DC a sanctuary city for people seeking abortions

Editor May 7, 2022
The District would become a sanctuary city for abortion seekers under a bill introduced to the city council Friday.

Washington Post: New bill would make D.C. a ‘sanctuary’ city for those seeking abortion

Editor May 7, 2022
D.C. Council member Brianne K. Nadeau introduced legislation Friday that would create a “human rights sanctuary” in the District for anyone traveling to the city to get an abortion.

WTOP: Frederick Douglass Memorial Bridge project work suspended over bird’s nest

Editor May 6, 2022
A family of ducks has moved into the new Frederick Douglass Memorial Bridge, and it’s holding up construction.

WTOP: DC announces $20M in grants for high-impact tutoring programs

Editor May 6, 2022
D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser has announced a new $20 million investment in high-impact tutoring she says will help address pandemic-disrupted instruction and close opportunity gaps for thousands of K-12 students.
Previous 1 … 164 165 166 167 168 … 1,252 Next

Latest

District Links: Council unanimously approves key FY 2027 budget legislation; White House criticism of Smithsonian…

Jul 7, 2026 8
The DC Council voted unanimously this afternoon to approve a revised version of the Fiscal Year 2027 Budget Support Act after incorporating a series of amendments offered by councilmembers.

District Links: DC Council set for final vote tomorrow on FY 2027 budget legislation; Trump administration renews…

Jul 6, 2026 7
DC Council Chair Phil Mendelson this morning distributed the latest version of the Fiscal Year 2027 Budget Support Act, which is slated for final consideration at an additional legislative meeting…

District Links: DC touts two-year-old FEMS transfusion program as lifesaving success; record fireworks show brings air…

Jul 2, 2026 17
The DC Fire and Emergency Medical Services Department is hailing the success of its two-year-old program that enables paramedics to administer whole blood to critically injured and medically unstable…

Kathy Patterson: The mayor and council are killing a key commission created after 9/11

Jul 1, 2026 146
The DC Council created an expert advisory panel in the aftermath of the 9/11 terrorist attacks. This year the mayor and council have agreed to kill the District’s Homeland Security Commission despite…
Prev Next 1 of 768
Support local journalism
As a nonprofit, we rely on community support to fulfill our mission of providing high-quality, in-depth local public affairs journalism. Please contribute today to help us continue our work and build a solid foundation for future growth!

Donate now

Subscribe to our newsletter
Sign up here to get District Links, a comprehensive DC politics roundup, delivered directly to your inbox.
You can unsubscribe at any time

Most Popular

Who’s on DC’s general election ballot

Sep 24, 2020 26,444
Here’s a listing of the citywide and ward candidates on DC’s general election ballot. We’ve included links to candidates’ political websites and Twitter accounts for those running for positions other…

An overview of endorsements in DC Council, State Board of Education races

Oct 19, 2020 17,825
If it’s hard to keep track of all the candidates on the Nov. 3 ballot, it may be even tougher to keep track of everyone who has endorsed them. To that end, The DC Line compiled as many endorsements…

District’s 296 ANC races draw up to five candidates, but two-thirds are uncontested

Aug 14, 2018 10,911
About a third of the District’s 296 advisory neighborhood commission seats have contested races, based on the candidate list released by the DC Board of Elections last week after the petition deadline…

Thousands of people in DC use housing vouchers. How much should they be worth?

Oct 20, 2022 10,503
People using housing vouchers in DC spent this past summer in limbo. In the spring, the DC Housing Authority (DCHA) deliberated changing the maximum value of all 20,000 vouchers the agency…
Prev Next 1 of 7,049
Photo of the day

Cleveland Park

theDCline© - . All Rights Reserved.
Sign in

Welcome, Login to your account.

Forget password?
Sign in

Recover your password.

A password will be e-mailed to you.