- The Inn at Little Washington will use mannequins to fill awkward emptiness in a socially distant dining room. [Washingtonian]
- D.C. gyms consider reservations, temperature checks, and banning high fives as they prepare to reopen. [NBC 4]
- What D.C.’s historic district neighborhood designation really means. [GGWash]
- The Columbia Heights’ Giant discovered an illegal card reader in the store. [Washingtonian]
- An uncovered time capsule in Arlington Cemetery tells century-old stories. [Post]
- Cuba’s foreign minister upbraided the Trump administration for its handling of last month’s shooting at the Cuban embassy. [WTOP]
- A new report shows D.C. leads the U.S. states with the highest percentage of essential workers in its labor force. [WUSA 9]
- The region’s community pools don’t know when, or if, they’ll open this summer. [FOX 5]
- Hundreds of Maryland residents testified before lawmakers about the state’s broken unemployment system. [Post]
- Motorcoach drivers will rally in D.C. today, calling for more federal relief to their industry. [WTOP]
- A Maryland man caught the attention of state leaders with his detailed coronavirus data graphs. [WJLA]
- The Prince William County public school system is spending hundreds of dollars an hour for an investigation into the superintendent’s Twitter DMs. [FOX 5]
- ICYMI: Northern Virginia hair salons are bracing for prolonged closure as the region extends the shutdown.
- ICYMI: USPS says a “personnel shortage” led to the mail delivery issues in Ward 8.
- This Day in DCist: A D.C.-based author faced backlash after she snitched on a Metro employee for eating on a train.
Colleen Grablick