Results tagged “northeastd>”

Via Frozen Tropics, we find this story from Voice of the Hill about a recent change in policy at Gallaudet University, the nation's premier college for the deaf and hard of hearing in Northeast D.C. According to the story, Gallaudet recently extended its student code of conduct rules to include student behavior off campus after neighborhood residents lodged complaints about rowdy late-night parties hosted by students from the school. The change in rules has reportedly...

The civil trial for D.C. administrative law judge Roy L. Pearson's lawsuit against local dry cleaning business Custom Cleaners, in which he's now asking for $54 million — as opposed to the original $67 million suit he filed in April — is underway right now at the at D.C. Superior Court. WTOP's Neal Augenstein reports that the courtroom is currently standing-room only. Pearson's original suit sought damages for the loss of his pants, as well...

Last night, Northeast D.C. saw a robbery, a high-speed chase, gun shots directed at police, an injured cyclist, and a barricade situation, all rolled into one. Police cars, flashing lights and emergency vehicles woke up many residents late last night around a normally quiet stretch of Capitol Hill. NBC 4 notes that investigators have said the incident "started around 9:30 p.m. after three suspects robbed a man at gunpoint at 41st and Benning Road Northeast...

Former Editor-in-Chief Ryan Avent writes a weekly column about neighborhood issues. I know that certain, wonderfully stubborn organizations continue to press for an underground tunnel through Tyson's Corner. It's a very sensible thing to pursue, and I don't blame them at all. Still, there are advantages to running your rail above ground, if circumstances permit it. The view, for one thing. Simply by riding the Red Line east three stops out of Union Station, you...

Good morning, Washington. We hope you're as excited as we are to read about how we're going to have lower heating bills this winter, due to predictions of a mild winter ahead. Hooray! We think we'll put that extra money towards a nice vacation. But hey, errr, wait a minute. Does this mean we're not going to get any full snow days again this year? Noooooo! Increase in Crime on Metro Slowing?: The Examiner reports...

Hey there, D.C. It's another bright, sunny day in our fair city, with an expected high of 89 degrees. While it's certainly not as hot as it was earlier this month, we feel sure George Allen is feeling the heat this this morning, as he struggles to explain what was one of the most blogged-about topics on the Internet yesterday. Who else might be feeling the heat this morning? Anyone trying to sell their homes...

Post Heeds Advice of Mid-Nineties Band We've talked about this before, as have others, but a tipster told us that the Post will shelve plans to meld its Health, Food, and Home section into one, and will instead decide to keep 'em separated. We first heard of the plan to combine the three, relatively anemic sections last November, but couldn't pin anything down on what was actually happening. Now we sort-of know (for the next...

The District has become expert at approaching public issues with an ambivalence approaching schizophrenia. We want and don't want development, fear and don't fear gentrification, and embrace and disdain our suburbs. Perhaps nothing encapsulates our status as capital of the love-hate relationship more than our approach toward big-box retail. Many of us looked on with approval at Annapolis' decision to require more health care spending from Wal-Mart, and residents of Northeast D.C. waged an all-out...

The District has seen good times in the last few years. Business is booming and neglected properties and neighborhoods are seeing new investment. Crime has plummeted over the past decade, and corruption in the government has faded even as the city's coffers have filled with new tax revenues. The ebbing of many of the city's old problems has combined with the election year to place a new and intense focus on fixing the city's...

Good morning, Washington. Now that the National Zoo has doled out public tickets, more photos of the baby panda are appearing online. Flickr user guy_incognito has uploaded an adorable set of photos of Butterstick/Tai Shan. Although we don't want to make you too jealous, this DCist will be taking a peek today. Turning to the news, yesterday was one of those days when all kinds of odd news improbably happens on the same day. What...

Anyone who bikes around the District learns to appreciate the ups and downs of cycling-related infrastructure and vehicular temperment in going from home to work to play and back. There are the potholed city streets that threaten the hardiest of tires, bikes lanes that arbitrarily appear and disappear (and the drivers that assume they can use them for their double-parking purposes), the possibility of being doored by an unwitting commuter emerging from their car, and...

Maryland Subdivision Goes Up in Flames, Arson to Blame: It appears that arson had a role to play in the fires that destroyed or damaged 30-some homes south of the city in an affluent Charles County subdivision early Monday morning. Since the homes were still under construction, there were no injuries. The FBI says it is looking into the possibility that environmental extremists could have played a role in the torching of the Hunters Brooke...

Good morning, Washington. There may be some rain moving into the area, so don't forget your umbrella. Temperatures will be in the 50s approaching 60 degrees. Owners Delay Expos Vote: In a vote that was to officially seal the deal that would bring the Montreal Expos to Washington, baseball owners in Chicago have delayed their vote, the AP, via WJLA, reports. The Post reports that the deal is not in any danger of faltering considering...

Grays Coming Soon? D.C. sports authorities have indicated that Major League Baseball wants a named picked for D.C.'s new baseball team as soon as possible. The AP, via WTOP, says that MLB officials want the name settled so marketing can begin. Speaking of Baseball, More Stadium Controversy: The District may have underestimated the costs required to renovate RFK Stadium and build a new permanent stadium on South Capitol Street. The Post reports that it may...

The group behind the effort to build a massive video slots and entertainment complex on New York Avenue in Northeast D.C. is making a slight retreat as it has withdrawn about 10% of the 3,800-some petitions submitted to get a measure approving D.C. gambling on the Nov. 2 ballot. The Post reports that the group's lawyer, John Ray, listed 389 petitions that the initiative's pushers "would like to withdraw." Three petition circulators told the D.C....

National Public Radio's beloved deposed elder statesman, Bob Edwards, has a new assignment. Edwards will leave NPR to compete against his old radio show, "Morning Edition" on XM Satellite Radio starting in October. Edwards tells the Post the he will "be a pioneer again," much like when he joined NPR in 1974 when the radio network was just three years old. Edwards has always seemed to be at the forefront of D.C. commercial development. For...

Part of Adams Morgan's charm Sunday mornings is seeing all the trash (mainly oversized pizza slice paper plates) and other remainders from the night before strewn among the worn sidewalks and streets. But just as Georgetown's streets have been under massive reconstruction the past four years to eliminate manhole explosions, the city's other bar crawl district could be slated for a sidewalk clean-up and reconstruction of its own. Adams Morgan's advisory neighborhood commission has recently...

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