- A Black queer woman shares her experience working in D.C.’s upscale-restaurant industry. [Washingtonian]
- D.C. teachers raised safety concerns in a new report regarding school reopening in the fall. [NBC 4]
- A judge ruled that a Prince George’s jail has improved its coronavirus safety measures, but activists say otherwise. [Post]
- A former U.S. senator from Nebraska is pushing back against development plans in his Capitol Hill neighborhood. [WBJ]
- An online petition is calling for a Rockville high school to change its name. [WJLA]
- D.C. restaurants and bars are using private cabanas to give customers a socially distant hangout space. [Washingtonian]
- Rita Davis, a great-great granddaughter of slaves, is the legal mind behind Ralph Northam’s case to remove Richmond’s Robert E. Lee statue. [Post]
- Bowser said she’s not “entirely clear” on what Trump’s Fourth of July plans will look like. [WJLA]
- Multiple teenagers tested positive for coronavirus after going on a senior week vacation in Delaware. [Washingtonian]
- Employees and residents inside D.C.’s biggest apartment building say management has not addressed the spread of coronavirus in their building. [Post]
- A local aerospace engineer developed an at-home coding kit for kids stuck at home. [WTOP]
- The founder of a D.C. carpooling start-up hopes to expand the service as schools reopen amid the pandemic. [WBJ]
- ICYMI: Police clashed with protesters near Lafayette Square yesterday afternoon and into the evening.
- ICYMI: Eighteenth Street Lounge will close after 25 years in Dupont.
- This Day in DCist: Three teens and an adult were handcuffed for selling water at the National Mall.
Colleen Grablick