- Dr. Deborah Birx recommended that Virginia reimpose restrictions on bars and crowd sizes amid rising coronavirus cases. [NBC 4]
- A Prince George’s County police sergeant alleges racial discrimination in the department’s promotion process. [WJLA]
- Krissah Thompson is now the Washington Post’s first African American woman to become a managing editor. [Post]
- Call Your Mother’s Georgetown location opens today. [Popville]
- John Falcicchio will stay on as D.C.’s deputy mayor for planning and economic development. [WBJ]
- Maryland’s health department will soon stop funding the required coronavirus tests for nursing home staff, leaving facilities to foot the bill. [Post]
- D.C.’s self-quarantine travel order could change how local universities reopen next month. [Post]
- WMATA wants to seize property in Maryland through eminent domain to build new facilities. [WBJ]
- Former Washington NFL team players were charged with counts of fraud in a health care benefit scheme. [WTOP]
- A D.C. Water and Sewer Authority employee shot and killed himself outside a Southeast agency complex. [Post]
- State-run coronavirus testing sites in Maryland will now hand out free face masks. [WTOP]
- It’s peak bloom at a Montgomery County sunflower field. [Washingtonian]
- ICYMI: Maryland is exempt from D.C.’s quarantine order, but officials say beachgoers should be cautious.
- ICYMI: Some D.C.-area private schools are seeing increased interest as public schools’ plans for the fall remain uncertain.
- This Day in DCist: Vincent Orange became president and CEO of the D.C. Chamber of Commerce.
Colleen Grablick