Deborah Simmons
Articles by Deborah Simmons
Fort Dupont Ice Arena funding
D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser, meet businessman Willem Polak, chairman of the Friends of Fort Dupont Ice Arena. Published February 4, 2019
D.C. considers ‘high-stakes’ teaching offers
As many of you are aware, the Los Angeles Unified School District and Mayor Eric Garcetti recently ended a labor strike by making concessions to the United Teachers Union. Published January 31, 2019
D.C. should reach out to clergy to fight crime
This past weekend four men were killed in the District. Published January 28, 2019
Measles outbreaks shame Congress
IRS employees are processing annual tax returns. TSA workers are protecting airline passengers. Members of the military, federal law enforcers and other first responders are manning their posts. Health professionals are on edge, sounding alarms about measles "hot spots." Published January 24, 2019
Scripting Trump’s SOTU address
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is wedged between a rock and a hard place. Will she gavel in Donald Trump for his State of the Union speech on Jan. 29 or will she refuse to perch behind the man in the "people's house"? The optics of a Trump SOTU and a seated Speaker Pelosi would be a first for her -- and perhaps one she could not stomach. Published January 21, 2019
Gerrymandering America’s elections
Purse your lips, place one index finger perpendicular to your lips, both fingers if you're a bully. Now shake your head. Published January 14, 2019
Straw Nazis on the march in D.C.
What's City Hall doing? Preparing to enforce a law that bans plastic and other noncompostable drinking straws and stirrers. Published January 10, 2019
Marijuana gangs are hippie-dippie happy
Advocates have long sought the authority to sell and tax marijuana, and they are hoping the 116th Congress makes their dream come true. Published January 8, 2019
D.C. to probe crime stats
A D.C. lawmaker wants to probe crime statistics, and he wants "snitches" to spill the beans. Published January 7, 2019
Shutdown reveals D.C. marriage, wedding ‘emergency’
The federal government shutdown seems to have thrown a wrench into the gears of love, marriage and weddings. It's a false breakdown, though. Published January 3, 2019
Community service as a civics lesson
Perhaps the problem rests with the fact that much of the teaching and learning in schools rest in the abstract. A generation of teachers is trying to teach things they themselves never experienced. Published December 31, 2018
Reforming criminal justice: Now what?
Something seems amiss, though, with the first step in criminal justice reform. It's annoying because the endeavor seems to have no end goal. Published December 27, 2018
Older generation teaches and learns
Check this out — an education program worthy of replication from the Lone Star State. Published December 17, 2018
Public school conundrum
Overseers of public charters tighten the screws on accountability. Are overseers of traditional public schools doing the same? Published December 13, 2018
Let’s go Dan Snyder, let’s go!
The key to any new stadium, as you know, is the owner, and in the case of the Washington Redskins that owner is Dan Snyder, who was reared as a Redskins fan. So, with the 'Skins making so many blunders on and off the field, it's time to wonder: Does Mr. Snyder dream the big dream? Published December 10, 2018
After the blue wave, a new push against school choice
Chris Van Hollen, the junior senator from Maryland, appears to have volunteered himself as the water bearer for education reform. The Democrat already has synchronized strategy with the teachers' unions and other progressive groups that want to rewrite the narrative on school choice. Published December 6, 2018
What’s going on at D.C. Fire and EMS?
Now, I don't know about you, but it struck me as odd that one of the first things out of the mouths of the media and fire officials was that Miss Annie' home did not have working smoke detectors. Published December 5, 2018
D.C. hires school scandal fixers
Well, unless you were a D.C. parent or a D.C. leader privileged enough to have had a sitdown with either of these gentlemen, you haven't a clue as to who they are and what their agendas are. Published December 3, 2018
Redskins and the Reuben Foster roller coaster
It falls to Foster and his true family and friends to ensure he walks the straight and narrow. Such character reform doesn't fall into the hands of a jail, prison or correctional institution. Critics of the Redskins-Foster deal miss the point when they focus on the domestic abuse aspect. Published November 29, 2018
Thank Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez for a valuable lesson
Most Americans expect public schools to teach children the basics of the United States of America, and a great place to start those lessons is the U.S. Constitution -- the rock-solid foundation under which it still stands. Published November 26, 2018