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Entries from DCist tagged with 'poverty'

October 24, 2007

>> The District's poverty rate is the highest in nearly a decade, and the employment rate for African American adults is at a 20-year low. [WaPo] >> ACK! OMG! The Hair! The Hair! Blood on the Hair! [Princess Sparklepony] >> bam! smack!@ Pow! [craigslist] >> WASA says it has repaired the two holes that were leaking raw sewage into the Anacostia River. [WaPo] >> Adam Clampitt has filed papers to run as an independent......

Continue Reading "Go Home Already: Lest Ye Be Judged"

October 17, 2007

"The trouble with radicals,” goes a quote widely attributed to early 20th century economist Thomas Nixon Carver, “is that they only read radical literature, and the trouble with conservatives is that they don’t read anything.” That both sides of the political spectrum have proven that to be a lie will be apparent tomorrow tonight at the Trover Shop on Capitol Hill, which is hosting The Hill’s Sixth Annual Political Book Fair. Participating authors include current......

Continue Reading "Preview: Annual Political Book Fair Tonight"

September 23, 2007

Former Editor-in-Chief Ryan Avent writes a weekly column about neighborhood and development issues. The Washington Highlands neighborhood of the District of Columbia is terra incognita for many Washingtonians. Tucked up against the District’s southeastern border with Maryland’s Prince George’s County, the area is walled off from the rest of the city by Oxon Run Park, the Anacostia Freeway, Bolling Air Force Base, and the Anacostia River, not to mention the yawning gap between its economic......

Continue Reading "Alone Together"

September 9, 2007

Former Editor-in-Chief Ryan Avent writes a weekly column about neighborhood and development issues. I don’t suppose it would surprise most District residents to hear that there are sharp differences in income between the city’s neighborhoods and racial and ethnic groups. We see it all around us, but especially in those parts of the city where the lives of the haves abut and intermingle with those of the have-nots. These gentrification frontiers are often a locus......

Continue Reading "Gentrifact and Gentrifiction"

September 7, 2007

Tom Knott: Once again, Tom Knott has managed to take what seems to be an isolated incident and turn it into evidence that liberalism of any sort is just evil. This week, Knott recounts the badly-handled trial of a Liberian immigrant accused of raping a seven-year-old girl in Montgomery County. Due to some bad decision by the trial judge, the charges were eventually dropped, though the county has stated that it will appeal. Regardless, it's......

Continue Reading "Weekly Columnist Roundup: It's the Liberals' Fault"

July 16, 2007

MONDAY: Freelance journalist and award-winning author Kieran Doherty will be at Olsson's in Old Town Alexandria to discuss her latest book, Sea Venture: Shipwreck, Survival, and the Salvation of the First English Colony in the New World, which chronicles the ship that went on to rescue Jamestown, even after most of the crew almost died in a hurricane. 7 p.m. Chasing Che author Patrick Symmes decided to go chasing Fidel Castro's former classmates when he......

Continue Reading "Reader, Meet Author"

July 8, 2007

Former Editor-in-Chief Ryan Avent writes a weekly column about neighborhood and development issues. Over the past few weeks, events have conspired to place race squarely at the center of the debate over public education in the District of Columbia. After appointing Michelle Rhee the first ever Chancellor of District Schools, Mayor Fenty found himself faced with a barrage of criticism and innuendo from the Washington Post drawing attention to the fact that she was not......

Continue Reading "Choosing to End Segregation"

July 5, 2007

Written by DCist contributor John Harlow Earlier this week, Georgetown announced the appointment of Michael Eric Dyson to the university's faculty. A controversial media figure - Dyson was notably involved in a public spat with Bill Cosby, when he called the comedian's comments on race and poverty during a 2004 NAACP award speech "dangerously naive and empirically wrong" - and prolific author of nearly a dozen volumes of social and cultural theory, Dyson may be......

Continue Reading "Michael Eric Dyson Heads to Georgetown"

June 29, 2007

They’re back in the limelight, and dressed to impress. After wooing fans up and down the coast on stage and TV, Hello Tokyo is now tackling the fashion industry. The D.C. based pop rockers have recently completed a photo shoot to be featured in Fashion Fight’s Poverty’s (FFP) 2007 Lookbook. What is Fashion Fights Poverty? “Featuring national and international designers who employ ethical means and practices in their design and manufacturing processes to produce products......

Continue Reading "Ticket Giveaway: Hello Tokyo"

June 27, 2007

Since 2003, D.C. residents have been able to pick up a copy of the now bi-monthly newspaper Street Sense from a local vendor for a dollar. Inside, one finds in-depth reporting on issues of homelessness and poverty, profiles of vendors -- members of the homeless who make 75 cents off every paper sold -- information on services by shelters, veterans groups and other organizations, book reviews (the current issue tackles John Edwards' Ending Poverty in......

Continue Reading "Street Sense Gets Poetic"

June 14, 2007

It's summer and our beloved Arts Editor is away this week, so the agenda is a little on the short side. Here are a few things to see. >> We have written before about the Washington Project for the Arts\Corcoran's Experimental Media project. Starting this week, WPA\C is hosting a new show called SiteProjects DC. Curator Welmoed Laanstra has asked 15 local artists to create site-specific outdoor artwork, both installations and performances, through July 28,......

Continue Reading "Arts Agenda: Bits and Pieces"

May 8, 2007

"Martin O'Malley signed the nation's first living wage law on Tuesday," read the Post this morning. Seems a little unfair, seeing as how the District passed its own living wage legislation back in January of 2006, a law which mandated that any firm receiving a District government contract in excess of $100,000 must pay its employees a minimum of $11.75 an hour. The Maryland law is similar; state contractors are required to pay workers $11.30......

Continue Reading "Working for a Living Wage"

May 7, 2007

>> Both the Examiner and the WaPo have stories today about the dreary work ahead for D.C.'s deputy mayor for education, Victor Reinoso. A recent report released by the Children’s Advocacy Roundtable which shows that 32 percent of children in the District of Columbia are living below the poverty line -- twice the national average. The report also highlights the high number of youth victims of violent crime and the high obesity rate among......

Continue Reading "Go Home Already: Think of the Children "

April 26, 2007

Dear Hillary Clinton and Dick Cheney: feel free to do embarrassing things in public today. D.C.'s celebrity (and we use that term loosely) photogs are probably following around real celebs -- well, at least Angelina Jolie. Yesterday the Examiner gave us the heads-up on a litany of famous-outside-the-Beltway folks traipsing around town this week. So if you're a little tired of running into Nicolas Cage filming National Treasure 2, keep your eyes peeled for these......

Continue Reading "Hollywood for Ugly People Slightly Less Ugly"

March 15, 2007

>> Looks like this morning's hellish Red Line delays were caused by an electrical malfunction involving the much-storied third rail. Sparks and smoke were first reported on the tracks between Dupont Circle and Woodley Park Stations at 7:15 a.m., forcing both north and southbound trains to share one track for two hours. Delays continued after the issue was resolved, as backed-up passengers filtered onto inbound trains. [Washington Post] >> One blogger tells the harrowing tale......

Continue Reading "Go Home Already: Ides of March Madness"

January 15, 2007

While D.C. Mayor Adrian Fenty officially pays tribute to Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. today at the University of the District of Columbia, one question comes to mind -- how well has the District actually guarded and promoted King's legacy? Given the state of a library and an avenue named after the famed civil rights fighter, not too well. The Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library stands as a contradiction at the corner of Ninth......

Continue Reading "D.C. Tributes to MLK Left Wanting"

November 7, 2006

The opening night of Washington National Opera's final production of the fall, Giacomo Puccini's Madama Butterfly, offers yet another opportunity to wonder why in the world this opera remains so popular with American audiences. Most opera fans, myself included, love this opera because the music, especially for the title character, is some of the most memorable that Puccini penned. However, the libretto by Giuseppe Giacosa and Luigi Illica tells a story that should inspire disgust.......

Continue Reading "Madama Butterfly @ Washington National Opera"

October 24, 2006

While it's not unusual to see a solid cast backed by a capable ensemble in a typical D.C. theatrical production, your average show probably is only going to deliver one or two magnificent performances. Clearly, Theatre Alliance's production of Toni Morrison's The Bluest Eye is not your typical D.C. production. One after the other, we see the members of this graceful group of actors offer remarkable turns, particularly by the show's female contingent. The Bluest......

Continue Reading "The Bluest Eye Is An H Street Triumph"

June 19, 2006

MONDAYEver wondered what it’s like to spend every day in the company of toothless, semi-retarded, supine bunny rabbits? You know, the sort that are fuzzy, cuddly and sometimes cute, but dumb as a box of rocks? Go see Helen Thomas discuss her new book Watchdogs of Democracy?: The Waning Washington Press Corps and How It Has Failed the Public. Olsson's Books & Records, 418 7th St. NW., 7 p.m. TUESDAY The popularity of the CSI......

Continue Reading "Reader, Meet Author"

April 17, 2006

It's hardly a secret that the American people tend towards the larger side. It's even less a secret that obesity correlates with poverty -- the poorer the American, the more likely that they will eat unhealthy foods. And as the Washington Times reported yesterday, donations to local food banks seem not to be helping the problem any. The Times reported that local food banks and soup kitchens are increasingly dealing with donations of candy bars,......

Continue Reading "Junk Food Clogs Food Banks"

April 13, 2006

What's new(est) with Wolf Parade? These brothers of Brock, peers of Pitchfork and travelers on the Arcade Fire turnpike are going strong. Yet they also maintain that aura of youthful poverty and subsequent spiritual wealth that's critical to their frenetic, idealism-tinged sound. Their EP drew buzz and their debut long player, Apologies to the Queen Mary, confirmed it. The group’s got almost as many side projects as members, with Arlen's AIDS Wolf and Krug's Thunder......

Continue Reading "Wolves on Parade"

January 23, 2006

When the Minuteman Project set up shop in Herndon late last year, their ongoing crusade to act as a defense of last resort against illegal immigration brought national attention to the very local issue of day laborers. Day laborers -- primarily Hispanic, mostly illegal -- have long gathered in front of businesses and alongside busy roads, waiting to picked up by employers seeking landscaping or construction work. Their presence had been such that last August......

Continue Reading "Study Reveals Information on Day Laborers"

December 8, 2005

In a perfect world, DCist would purchase its holiday gifts straight out of "Fantasy Gifts" section of the Neiman Marcus Christmas Book catalogue. Unfortunately, we lack the $3.5 million to purchase the Jetsonian M400 Skycar for Dad and the $1.5 million to lock up the private Elton John concert for Mom. Considering both our relative poverty and our reluctance to be a Cell Phone Bandit copycat, we must turn to other – significantly cheaper –......

Continue Reading "Wine Expo: You Can Do Your Homework ... On the Boat!"

December 1, 2005

So, is that tall, festively-decorated spruce tree you have in that public building a Christmas tree? A seemingly innocuous question has District officials in a tizzy, with some demanding that their trees be recognized as "Christmas" trees while others prefer the PC, non-denominational "holiday" designation. The D.C. National Guard opts for "Christmas," the District Department of Transportation chooses "holiday." So which should it be? Metro Adds Signs to Escalators: Finally, Metro heard our pleas. According......

Continue Reading "Morning Roundup: What Type of Tree Is That Edition"

November 11, 2005

FRIDAY >> Start the night off right at the DCist Happy Hour at 51st State. We'll all be there to celebrate our nation's veterans in the traditional manner: by drinking heavily. >> Who doesn't love a DJ who posts iPod playlists on the Internet so you can recreate a great night of dancing anytime, anywhere (especially when those playlists include choice selections like Kaiser Chiefs, The Rapture and James White and the Blacks)? Come celebrate......

Continue Reading "Out and About: Weekend Picks"

November 10, 2005

Today's weather is being described by local weathermen as "blustery." So while it may be sunny and the world outside your office may look inviting, be forewarned -- temperatures will feel cooler than the mid 50s predicted as wind whips across the area. Mayoral Candidates Engage in Lively Debate: The District's five mayoral candidates engaged in lively debate last night at the University of the District of Columbia, defending their records and promoting their......

Continue Reading "Morning Roundup: Blustery Edition"

November 4, 2005

Last Saturday, Washington National Opera opened its new production of George Gershwin's classic American opera Porgy and Bess (1935), and this DCist was happy to be in the Kennedy Center Opera House for the performance Wednesday night. We know that many DCists wonder why we bother to cover things like opera and classical music, which seem too stuffy and expensive for many people. However, this opera especially is part of our heritage as Americans, and......

Continue Reading "DCist Goes to the Opera"

November 2, 2005

Smoking real estate market. Budget surpluses. New baseball stadium. Revitalized neighborhoods. Really makes the District sound idyllic, doesn't it? Maybe not. A study released by the D.C. Fiscal Policy Institute yesterday may well throw some cold water on the city's celebration of its good fortune, though. According to the study, which analyzed census data to determine economic changes in District neighborhoods from 1990 to 2000, income inequality in the city continues to grow, with top......

Continue Reading "Long Live the District's Economic Boom!"

September 7, 2005

Economically ruinous scheme or social justice imperative? Well, tonight you'll at least hear the latter argument over whether or not the District needs a living wage. D.C. for Democracy is hosting a meeting tonight at which three speakers -- MacKenzie Baris of D.C. Jobs With Justice, Ed Lazere of the D.C. Fiscal Policy Institute, and several students from the Georgetown University Living Wage Campaign -- will discuss legislation currently before the D.C. City Council mandating......

Continue Reading "A Living Wage for the District?"

August 10, 2005

Remember how Live 8 eradicated starvation and poverty in Africa? Well, our boys and girls overseas better start packing up their gear, because the anti-war movement has an impending activism concert of its own. As part of a large anti-war mobilization in DC between September 23rd – 26th, “Operation Ceasefire” will bring several music acts to the mall, including Thievery Corporation, Le Tigre, Anti-Flag, Bouncing Souls, and Head Roc, most likely with more to be......

Continue Reading "Iraq 'n' Roll"
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