It was my third week in Georgetown, and I was taking an evening stroll around town; one cobblestone step after the other, marveling at the red brick rowhouses and the proud American flags. Then, as I!-->…
The Swedish trend of picking up trash while jogging, known as plogging, has been around for a few years now. So you’d expect enthusiasts to be on the lookout for the next big thing when it comes to!-->…
A free D.C. Internet program created last fall to connect thousands of low-income students is still only at a fraction of its capacity more than seven months after rollout.
From voter registration to unemployment benefits or food stamps, government-issued identification is critical for accessing local and federal services. However, retaining your ID and other vital!-->…
The D.C. Mayor’s Office of LGBTQ Affairs announced last week that it is reaching out to the community for help finding homeless or “unstably housed” LGBTQ seniors 62 years of age or older for a!-->…
"At this point, I don’t have confidence that the Board of Commissioners or other senior executives will exercise integrity in the performance of their public duties."
Metro will launch an extensive, yearslong effort next week to toss out more than 100 of its oldest and least reliable escalators — some of which have been deteriorating for decades.
WASHINGTON (AP) — Proponents of statehood for Washington, D.C., face a milestone moment in their decades-long movement to reshape the American political map.
Imagine a D.C. with a booming marijuana industry, skyscrapers reaching 20 stories tall and trains running in a new tunnel beneath the Potomac River. It could all be possible in a new State of!-->…
D.C. statehood advocate Josh Burch remembers walking into the House office building 10 years ago in search of the next co-sponsor of Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton’s D.C. statehood bill.
The Democratic-controlled Congress will soon try to transform part of the District of Columbia, which today is about one-eighteenth the size of Rhode Island but 18.9 percent larger than Denver!-->…
Dozens of members of the public, teachers, former students and police officers shared their feelings about the presence of police in D.C. public schools as District leaders listened.