Deborah Simmons
Articles by Deborah Simmons
D.C. Police Chief Contee faces major test
Getting and sustaining a tight grip on crime is no easy task for police chiefs in major urban areas, and the nation's capital is no exception. Published September 27, 2021
Trying to get school kids from Point A to Point B is easy
Grown folk are acting as though getting school kids from Point A to Point B on regular school days is a death-defying act, whether in an urban school district like D.C. or a suburban system like neighboring Montgomery County. Published September 20, 2021
Washington QBs vs. the NY Giants
Washington quarterback Ryan Fitzpatrick's on-field thigh injury put the NFL team in an all-too-familiar position in asking a familiar question: Who's next? Published September 15, 2021
Redrawing boundaries for D.C. wards
Before month's end, the U.S. Census data should be is the hands of D.C. officials and available for city residents to begin registering public comments about proposed boundaries for the city's eights wards. Published September 12, 2021
Biden’s COVID-19 bully pulpit shortchanges families
President Biden visited a traditional public school on Friday, the day after he delivered his six-point plan to beat down the coronavirus with his Government Knows Best approach. Published September 12, 2021
What do D.C. students know?
Do D.C. students benefit from D.C. education reforms? D.C. teachers can't answer the question. They don't know. Published September 9, 2021
Are D.C. and prosecutors on the same page?
The news of a mass shooting Saturday evening in the nation's capital was heard around the world. Published September 5, 2021
Chris Van Hollen crime-mental health bill misses mark
The key problem with Mr. Van Hollen's bill is that the Department of Health and Human Services, which oversees social programs, would lead the federal pack (because of the mental health angle) to say that police are part of the problem if and when a "situation" escalates. His proposal would create a $100 million federal program to bolster local agencies that look to alternatives for a law enforcement response. Published April 22, 2021
The cost of D.C. living
The cost of living in the nation's capital is on the rise, whether you want it to or not. Why? The cost of the pandemic is reaping much of the blame. Like most big cities, the District was shuffling personnel and agreements involving public, private and public-private ventures. Published April 19, 2021
President Biden stumbles again
President Biden did it again. He stumbled on his way up, but this time instead of the stairs of Air Force One, he let his mouth get in his way. Mr. Biden weighed in on the fatal shooting this weekend of a young Black man named Daunte Wright. Published April 12, 2021
Baltimore’s Kweisi Mfume waiting on federal cash
Baltimore calculates that it expects to receive $670 million from President Biden's American Rescue Plan -- and for a city whose pre-pandemic unemployment rate stood at 12% for Black residents compared to 4% for Whites, it can surely use some help. Is a rehash of the Lyndon Baines Johnson's Great Society the most effective and efficient road to travel? Rep. Kweisi Mfume seems to think so. Published April 8, 2021
D.C. loses track of who knows how much money
What's the point of a bunch of rules and regs regarding construction, housing and professional licensing if there's no long, stiff arm of law enforcement to verify? Published April 1, 2021
One-size schooling doesn’t fit all during the pandemic
The coronavirus pandemic has been a tough lesson for parents, teachers and politicians. The old-school one-size-fits-all way of education does not work. Charter school advocates have been saying as much all along. Published March 29, 2021
Washington Football Team’s fishbowl is shrinking again
Dan Snyder is on the hit list again. This time, it's the cancel culture's Time's Up who has drawn a bull's-eye on his back. The organization, whose supporters include Hollywood bigwigs Shonda Rhimes and Mark Walhberg, say the owner of the NFL's Washington Football Team is making a power grab. Published March 25, 2021
Summer employment or political sham?
It's that time of year again, when mayors tout their summer jobs programs — and how things will turn out during the second summer of the COVID-19 pandemic is as uncertain as the first and as questionable as school openings. Published March 22, 2021
Who’s going to rebuild our infrastructure?
Mayors and governors, in particular, love ribbon-cutting ceremonies. President Biden is no different. Mr. Biden calls his infrastructure plan the "Build Back Better Plan." But it's really not a plan. It's a vision. Mr. Biden's vision to live "greener." Published March 18, 2021
America puts immigrant children, families in crosshairs
Like huddled masses yearning to be free, children as young as 1 year old are cloistered in the United States. Published March 15, 2021
Ask questions before schools reopen
Now that President Biden has signed the $1.9 trillion stimulus package and speechified during prime time, it's time for average Americans to ask a few sensible and detailed questions. Published March 11, 2021
Kathy Gillchrist, daughter, finds her dad is mass killer Brad Bishop
Bishop has been on the run since 1976 and would be 84 on Aug. 1, unless he's dead. His daughter, Kathy Gillchrist, learned of her connection to Bishop after contacting a genealogist in Maine regarding her DNA. Published March 8, 2021
Schools must leave no child behind
Students registered in public school systems around the nation are "missing" school due to closures blamed on COVID-19. But that the very public education systems designed to rescue children and save them from themselves leave kids behind is jolting. Published March 4, 2021