Photo by MudflapDC.

>> Ugly budget revelation day: The City Paper has a summary of the Gray budget’s $20.5 million hit on the city’s homeless services budget that would close the family shelter at D.C. General Hospital as well as single adult homeless shelters; Mike DeBonis, meanwhile, reports that Gray’s budget would indeed break a promise made to Councilmembers that hundreds of millions would be funneled into their wards in exchange for their “yes” votes on the Nationals Park financing plan.

>> The director of the city’s Child and Family Services Agency, Roque R. Gerald, resigned this morning. Councilmembers Jim Graham and Tommy Wells, the current and former chairs of the Council’s Human Services committee had nothing but nice things to say about Gerald, though he had a tough time instituting long-lasting reform at the agency shaken by the Benita Jacks tragedy in 2008.

>> Rare fiscal transparency from the world of sports: here’s how much every D.C. United player makes for playing soccer for a living.

>> The Library of Congress has unveiled some historical documents related to gay rights, including a petition submitted by Frank Kameny — who was fired in 1957 because he was gay — to the U.S. Supreme Court.

>> The Wizards are going to get new red, white and blue uniforms tomorrow; the Post’s Michael Lee says that the team’s current Wizard-and-cresent basketball logo is out. (The masses are already speculating and wondering about the definition of “gently worn.”)

>> Leslie Johnson’s constituents would really like to know when she’ll be getting disciplined.

>> Is Walmart running for office?

>> Interesting: when Maryland food sellers call their wares “local,” they’ll soon be required to note where the food came from on the packaging.

>> WaPo architecture critic Roger K. Lewis makes the case to eliminate the height limit in certain areas of D.C.

>> If your Acela trip to New York feels minutes shorter, well, thank Florida.

>> People are freaking out about BRAC.

>> There was a fire at Mixtec at 1792 Columbia Road NW last night.

>> A 19-year-old janitor stole more than $30,000 in checks from a city government office, signed them, then deposited them into her bank account. (Uh, yeah, she was caught.)