- The District is looking for a way to plug a $23 million hole in the budget for its public school system. [Post]
- The man who was sentenced to life in prison for driving a car into anti-racist protesters in Charlottesville is facing a second sentence from a state judge. [NBC4]
- Immigration raids didn’t materialize. [NPR via WAMU]
- Minority Democratic congresswomen are hitting back at President Trump after he told them to “go back” to their home countries. [NPR]
- Daniel Lippman is leaving Politico’s Playbook newsletter to report on the White House full-time. [Washingtonian]
- Here’s a sneak preview of the Air and Space Museum’s massive projection plans for the 50th anniversary of Apollo 11’s launch on Tuesday. [Fox5]
- The controls to a Metro operator cabin were left wide open on a Blue Line train on Saturday. [WJLA]
- Three young brothers who started a candle company so they could buy new toys are now donating 10 percent of their profits to D.C. area homeless shelters. [Post]
- Mocktails are really hot right now and there are dozens of places to find the zero-proof drinks right here in the District. [Eater]
- It’s been a year since D.C. United moved into its new Buzzard Point home at Audi Field. Here’s how things have changed. [WTOP]
- Metro is launching a Siri-like app to help people with disabilities find their way on D.C. public transit. [Post]
- Potomac residents who were cut off from their homes after last week’s torrential downpour are breathing a sigh of relief now that Montgomery County officials have reopened Belfast Road. [WTOP]
- Arlington is not fully living up to ambitious county plans to make the city more bike-friendly. [GGW]
- ICYMI: Two hotel chains headquartered in the D.C. area said they would not let ICE use their rooms as detention centers for immigrant families.
- ICYMI: An outspoken ANC commissioner wants to unseat former mayor Vincent Gray in Ward 7.
- This Day in DCist: A D.C. lawyer is squatting on Clinton website domains with “Hillary Potter” cartoons.