October 5, 2024

Today in D.C.: Headlines to start your Monday in D.C., Maryland and Virginia

Good Monday #GoodMonday

a person standing next to a tree: It was a wintry Christmas Day in Washington on Saturday, with mostly 30 degree temperatures, despite the official high of 57. © Bonnie Jo Mount/The Washington Post It was a wintry Christmas Day in Washington on Saturday, with mostly 30 degree temperatures, despite the official high of 57.

Good morning — it’s Monday. Grab your coffee or tea. Forget what happened this year? Here’s a run-down.

Today’s weather: Today, highs should top 50 degrees, before settling back down closer to 40 Tuesday and 45 Wednesday. But as we lean in to 2021, temperatures shoot back up, returning to the 50s on New Year’s Eve and into the 60s on New Year’s Day.

9:22 AM: D.C. rapper NappyNappa won’t let noise of world drown him out

a man standing in front of a store: D.C. rapper NappyNappa stands for portraits in Washington on Dec. 4. (Jahi Chikwendiu/The Washington Post) D.C. rapper NappyNappa stands for portraits in Washington on Dec. 4. (Jahi Chikwendiu/The Washington Post)

Floating out of his own dimension of space time — or at least looking the part — here comes NappyNappa, strolling the D.C. sidewalks in a floral knit sweater, iridescent purple swim trunks over charcoal sweatpants, a disposable face mask and sunglasses big enough to cover the rest of his face. He looks as stylish as his music, irregular but intentional: Nappa says he picks his clothes to correspond to the chromatic “vibrations” of each day of the week, a practice with roots in Eastern religions. “It’s cool,” he says. “You get to rock out every color.”

That fits. From the outside, Nappa appears to be wrapping up an extraordinary year, having generated a nonstop profusion of high-spirited, meta-spiritual rap music at exponentially high speeds. But aside from the pandemic, he says, his 2020 has felt pretty normal. Sure, it’s probably been the most productive 12 months of his musical life, but Nappa says he isn’t trying to make a statement, or flood a zone, or wow a listenership, or even eat up the clock before he can go out on tour again. “I’m trying to keep a connection with myself,” he says. “Shout out Lil Wayne. Shout out Prince. I’m not gonna be suffocated by the world. I really gotta break through to whatever freedom comes through on the other side.”

Like his hyper-prolific heroes before him, Nappa doesn’t think of his productivity as a stunt, or even a strategy. It’s a way of being. Transposing his life into lyrics feels as natural as any other everyday act. Like getting dressed. Or reciting a prayer.

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By: Chris Richards

9:06 AM: A waiter at a Maryland country club helps support thousands of students in Ghana

a man in a suit standing in front of a building: Samuel Quarcoo, 71, outside his Rockville home. For years, he has financially supported schools and children in his native Ghana and has also been a waiter at Woodmont Country Club since 1975. © Sarah L. Voisin/The Washington Post Samuel Quarcoo, 71, outside his Rockville home. For years, he has financially supported schools and children in his native Ghana and has also been a waiter at Woodmont Country Club since 1975.

Samuel Quarcoo’s crusade started by happenstance in 1999, when a third-grade teacher asked him to visit her class and give a presentation about Ghana, his African homeland.

Quarcoo, who lives in Rockville, Md., was then a math teacher at Wheaton Woods Elementary School in Montgomery County. He showed the kids some photos of his old neighborhood school in Ghana and explained that the students often did not have basic supplies such as pencils and notebooks.

A few days after his visit, the teacher informed him that her students wanted to donate money to buy school supplies for a few classrooms in Ghana, where the poverty rate was then about 39 percent, he said.

“I picked up the supplies for them and shipped them to the school in my old neighborhood,” said Quarcoo, now 71. “But I knew that couldn’t be the end of it.”

“When I grew up there, life was tough — I didn’t come from a wealthy family,” he said. “But I always had a place to rest my head, food to eat and clothes on my back. Many of the kids I’d sent the supplies to had nothing at all.”

Quarcoo decided to continue sending supplies to the Emmaus Methodist School and two additional schools in the capital, Accra. For years, he quietly bought backpacks, paper and crayons on his own and shipped them to school administrators, he said.

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By: Cathy Free

8:52 AM: Washington’s past: Ice skating, sledding on the Mall

a group of people riding on the back of a horse drawn carriage: A group of women ice skate in front of the Lincoln Memorial as boys slide by on their sleds. This negative from the National Photo Company Collection was approximately dated between 1909 and 1932. © National Photo Company Collection/(Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division A group of women ice skate in front of the Lincoln Memorial as boys slide by on their sleds. This negative from the National Photo Company Collection was approximately dated between 1909 and 1932.

It’s a bit too warm in Washington to start ice skating on the Mall with highs above 50 degrees around Washington today.

This photograph of people ice skating in front of the Lincoln Memorial is one of thousands from the National Photo Company Collection published by the Library of Congress. In the first half of the 20th century, the National Photo Company photographed news and life around Washington. Some of the images in the collection date back to 1850. The photo above doesn’t have an exact date or caption but all the negatives in the collection were taken between 1909 and 1932.

When’s the last time people skated on the Reflecting Pool? Well, it happened two years ago. When subzero temperatures swept across the East Coast, people took a step out on the ice for a photo in the icy tundra of the nation’s capital. Walking out on the ice or skating on the Reflecting Pool is prohibited. The National Park Police posted a warning on Facebook in 2018 that mentioned “a number of people attempting to skate or walk on the Reflecting Pool stepped through the ice.” No injuries were reported.

The New York Times first reported on the frozen Reflecting Pool and the people venturing out for a photo. At the time, a volunteer for the National Park Service told the Times that shooing tourists off the ice was “a bit like herding cats.”

This is one part in a series where we share a piece of the District’s past. If you have a story or a photo you’d like to share, please email postlocal@washpost.com — and thank you in advance.

By: Teddy Amenabar

8:37 AM: Workers are dreaming of returning to the office in 2021 — or dreading it

Before the pandemic, Jessica Hullman did not like to work from home.

A computer science professor at Northwestern University, just outside Chicago, Hullman, 40, drew energy from her students, she said. But away from campus, it dawned on her that the same students who fueled her also drained her focus with their frequent interruptions. In her mostly male department, she was often too aware of what she was wearing and how she appeared. Now she views Zoom faculty meetings as a kind of gender equalizer.

“It’s almost like everybody takes up the same amount of space,” she said. “What I realize is that I feel much happier working from home.”

Hullman is in no rush to return to the office.

Not so for 25-year-old Allie Micka. Micka moved from Boston to D.C. to start a new job as a solutions engineer at a tech firm — one she admired for its highly social culture. Micka imagined going out for after-work drinks and making lifelong friends. And the office was just as she had imagined — for exactly 10 days, before the coronavirus pandemic descended. Her now-virtual contact with her co-workers feels much too transactional. “As friendly as everyone is, it’s hard to just say ‘hi’ to get to know someone when you have no purpose for reaching out,” Micka said.

She can’t wait to be back in the office again.

The country is deep in the bleakest period of the pandemic, with thousands of Americans dying each day. That reality is not lost on affluent remote workers, who are quick to express gratitude for their own good fortune. They feel guilty complaining about Zoom fatigue and social isolation when they are working in relative safety and comfort.

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By: Sydney Trent

8:17 AM: Virginia’s longest-serving sheriff dies at his Hampton home, officials said

a man wearing a military uniform: Hampton Sheriff B.J. Roberts. © Courtesy of Hampton Sheriff’s Office Hampton Sheriff B.J. Roberts.

Hampton Sheriff B.J. Roberts, the longest-serving sheriff in Virginia, died peacefully Saturday at his home, according to the city sheriff’s office, which did not provide a cause of death.

Roberts, 70, blazed a trail for Black law enforcement officers in the state after he became Hampton’s first African American sheriff in 1992.

He was elected president of the National Sheriffs’ Association in 2010, becoming the first and only African American to lead the 70-year-old organization, according to the Hampton Sheriff’s Office.

During the first of his six terms in Hampton, Roberts helped improve the city’s overcrowded jail, focusing on preparing inmates to reintegrate into the community, according to news reports.

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By: Antonio Olivo

8:06 AM: Perspective: Dwayne Haskins wasted his latest shot at redemption

a person wearing a costume: Dwayne Haskins was relegated to the sideline during the fourth quarter of Washington’s loss to Carolina. (Jonathan Newton/The Washington Post) © Jonathan Newton/The Washington Post Dwayne Haskins was relegated to the sideline during the fourth quarter of Washington’s loss to Carolina. (Jonathan Newton/The Washington Post)

The Washington Football Team was done with Dwayne Haskins, and he had to know it. More than 10 minutes remained in a game that could have been his reclamation, and yet the coaches had told him he was no longer playing. He dropped onto the bench and shook his head.

Whatever final chances he had as Washington’s quarterback were blown Sunday with two intercepted passes, a lost fumble and several wayward throws in what would become a 20-13 loss to the Carolina Panthers at FedEx Field. His passer rating was 36.9. There was nothing more for Washington Coach Ron Rivera to see. The player drafted 15th overall last year to be the future of this franchise was finished in the next-to-last game of his second NFL season, pulled for Taylor Heinicke, an undrafted journeyman who has been with the team for less than three weeks.

“We didn’t get anything going,” Rivera said later in his postgame virtual news conference.

It was a phrase that could have described all of Haskins’s time with Washington: the bobbled opportunities, the odd moments that lacked self-awareness and the inexplicable decisions such as the one that came last week when he was photographed partying maskless in a room filled with people — an egregious violation of the NFL’s coronavirus protocols.

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By: Les Carpenter

7:41 AM: For D.C. protests, Proud Boys settle in at city’s oldest hotel and its bar

a tall building in a city: Powered by Microsoft News © Craig Hudson for The Washington Post Powered by Microsoft News

Located just five blocks from the White House, the Hotel Harrington is the city’s oldest continuously operating hotel and has a long-standing reputation as one of the most affordable hotels in the heart of the District. But over the past few months, the Harrington has been gaining a new reputation: Proud Boys hangout.

The militant right-wing organization that vigorously supports President Trump, which has clashed in violent street battles with members of anti-fascist groups and others who oppose Trump, has made the Harrington its unofficial headquarters when members come to the District. Several hundred Proud Boys recently stayed at the hotel while in town for the Dec. 12 protest of Joe Biden’s election as president.

More protests by pro-Trump groups are planned in downtown Washington on Jan. 6.

Wearing their signature black and gold colors, large numbers of the group spent much of the afternoon of Dec. 12 drinking openly and chanting on the street in front of the hotel at 11th and E streets NW. They ranged in age from late teenagers to 50- and 60-year-olds, though most appeared to be in their 30s and 40s. Others filled the outdoor patio at Harry’s, the hotel bar, where they had gathered on previous protest weekends and on the Fourth of July. Harry’s closed midafternoon, but the patio and street in front of it remained crowded throughout the night.

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By: Joe Heim and Marissa J. Lang

7:30 AM: As hospitals swell, nursing students are tapped to join the front lines for the second time

a couple of people posing for the camera: From left, Eymmy Jimenez, Stuart Barnett and Lucas Boulter. (Photos by Eymmy Jimenez; Kelci Tillman; Jordan Carr) From left, Eymmy Jimenez, Stuart Barnett and Lucas Boulter. (Photos by Eymmy Jimenez; Kelci Tillman; Jordan Carr)

The past eight months within the University of Maryland Medical System have been challenging, said Stuart Barnett, a nursing assistant and recent Towson University graduate. The demand on hospital staffers hasn’t waned since the pandemic started.

“Nurses, they’re still dealing with the same stuff, if not worse,” Barnett said. “There is somewhat of a stressful atmosphere.”

Before he finished nursing school, the 32-year-old was picking up hospital shifts between classes and working at a coronavirus testing center and field clinic in Baltimore. He had been eager to finish his program so he could devote more time at the facility where “there definitely is a need for nurses,” he said.

People need coronavirus tests. And some infected patients need to be monitored in case their condition worsens. But there aren’t enough health-care professionals to handle the crisis, according to Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan (R), who this month encouraged colleges and universities to grant health-care students who are in their final semesters and have satisfied graduation requirements an early exit from their programs.

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By: Lauren Lumpkin

7:18 AM: Bad drivers in D.C. could get a warning message from the city

a busy street filled with traffic next to a highway: Heavy traffic is seen on Interstate 270 in Montgomery County. © Sarah L. Voisin/The Washington Post Heavy traffic is seen on Interstate 270 in Montgomery County.

Bad drivers in the District could soon get a serious warning sent straight to their cellphones.

The city is working to identify drivers with a history of traffic violations, such as speeding and red-light camera tickets, to send messages alerting them of their history of infractions while warning of their risks of getting into a fatal crash.

City officials say they hope the pointed messages will deter dangerous road behaviors.

“We know that there is a subset of drivers that are putting others at serious risk with excessive speeding and red-light running,” said Jeff Marootian, director of the District Department of Transportation, one of the agencies leading the effort. “We’re hoping that this creative approach can ultimately reduce serious injury and fatality crashes.”

A team of city data experts is analyzing traffic citation data to identify drivers at a high risk of involvement in a serious crash. The “tailored messages,” they say, will be sent to a sample of those drivers next year. At the end of the 18-month pilot, officials say, they expect to know the answer to a key question: Can targeting messages to high-risk drivers prevent crashes?

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By: Luz Lazo

7:01 AM: Prince William County sheriff fires deputy for ‘disturbing comments’ on social media

A Prince William County sheriff’s deputy has been fired for posting “disturbing comments” to a conservative social media website, the county sheriff’s office announced Saturday. But the former deputy said that he didn’t make the comments and that his account was hacked.

Prince William Sheriff Glendell Hill said he was alerted to the comments on Christmas morning and promptly launched an internal investigation.

Several of the comments advocated violence, including against Chief Justice of the United States John G. Roberts Jr. for allowing the dismissal of a case seeking to overturn the results of the presidential election.

“I find them very despicable, and that’s why I took the action that I took,” Hill (R) said about the comments in a brief interview. “I certainly don’t approve of that, and, of course, it’s against our policy.”

The deputy, Aaron Hoffman, said in an interview with The Washington Post that he did not post those comments, saying the account he had recently opened on Parler, a social media website that has become a favorite among conservatives, was hacked.

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By: Antonio Olivo

6:45 AM: Residents in a D.C. retirement community give back to staff by tutoring their children

a person sitting on a bench in front of a window: Marna Tucker, 79, a retired lawyer and resident at the Ingleside at Rock Creek retirement community, has become an online tutor and mentor to Cameron Chance Jr., 17, a son of a staff member there. © Jodi Weakland Marna Tucker, 79, a retired lawyer and resident at the Ingleside at Rock Creek retirement community, has become an online tutor and mentor to Cameron Chance Jr., 17, a son of a staff member there.

This past spring, a few weeks into the pandemic, Monique Sparks’s work supervisor asked how her kids were doing.

Sparks didn’t sugarcoat it. “This socially distant learning is not the best,” she said. It was particularly hard on her older son, Cameron Chance Jr., who was in 10th grade when the virus struck.

“Cameron has always been very quiet, and he’s very shy. He’s not an outgoing person,” she said, adding that the Zoom classes and meetings with teachers online were out of his comfort zone. Even worse, the basketball court, where the teenager felt most at ease and where he had hoped a college recruiter might spot him, had fallen silent.

Sparks is a concierge at Ingleside at Rock Creek, a retirement community in the District, and as it happened, other staff members there were expressing similar concerns. Their jobs required that they show up for work in person, often leaving their children with few resources to navigate remote education.

“This is a real daunting task, trying to do home schooling when they’re not trained to do that,” said Kiersten Parsons, the facility’s independent living administrator. “They’re not able to work from home; they’re in a front-line position.”

After hearing from staffers and from the executive director, who was asking about ways to help them, Parsons had an idea: Why not use valuable resources right there at Ingleside?

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By: Tara Bahrampour

6:29 AM: D.C. man arrested for intentionally inflicting injuries on 2-year-old

A 25-year-old man has been arrested and charged with intentionally inflicting life-threatening injuries on a 2-year-old girl Wednesday evening in Northeast D.C.

Quanice Meniefield from Northeast was charged Wednesday with second-degree cruelty to children. There is also an arrest warrant out for first-degree cruelty to children for Maurice Meniefield, a 28-year-old from Northeast.

The young girl is being treated for her injuries and is in stable condition, according to D.C. police.

Police said an investigation determined that the offense was domestic in nature.

On Wednesday around 5:30 p.m., D.C. police detectives and family services received a report that a 2-year-old child had been physically abused and was at an unknown location. They found her in a residence in the 1200 block of 49th Street NE suffering from life-threatening injuries. She was transported to the hospital for evaluation.

An investigation into the incident is ongoing.

Neither Quanice nor Maurice Meniefield could be reached for comment.

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By: Emily Davies

6:10 AM: D.C.-area forecast: Mild today, cold midweek and then a big warm-up to ring in 2021

a fountain in front of a body of water: A chilly but bright afternoon at the World War II Memorial on Saturday. © C JRCook/Flickr/C JRCook/Flickr A chilly but bright afternoon at the World War II Memorial on Saturday.

The Capital Weather Gang rates today’s weather an 8/10: Sunshine and 50 degrees. A somewhat subjective rating of the day’s weather, on a scale of 0 to 10.

Today: We may awaken to a good deal of cloud cover as a cold front slides through, but we should see increasing sunshine by the afternoon. Cold air is slow to follow the cold front, and highs should still top 50 in many areas. Winds are from the southwest and west at about 10 mph. Confidence: Medium-High.

Tonight: Skies are mostly clear, and chilly air spills back into the region. Lows range from the upper 20s to low 30s, with winds from the northwest at 5 to 10 mph. Confidence: Medium-High.

Tomorrow (Tuesday): A bright and sunny but cold winter’s day. Highs should climb to around 40. Winds from the northwest around 10 to 15 mph make it feel several degrees chillier. Confidence: High.

For other forecasts and more on weather in the Washington region, sign up to receive the Capital Weather Gang in your inbox. (Or, on your smart speaker.)

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By: Jason Samenow

6:01 AM: What do you think of Today in D.C.? Share your feedback.

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And please email postlocal@washpost.com with any questions or news from your neighborhood.

By: Teddy Amenabar

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