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Deborah Simmons

Deborah Simmons was a senior correspondent who reported on City Hall and wrote about education, culture, sports and family-related topics.

Articles by Deborah Simmons

SIMMONS: Give thanks for blessings and thought for needy

The politicians who just left for Thanksgiving will continue to talk turkey after they return to Washington. But before they do, it's incumbent upon us on this day and in the months ahead to remember that cutting federal spending can benefit each and every American if we do our part to fill a breach. Published November 23, 2011

SIMMONS: Raise teacher pay without raising bar?

Earlier this school year, D.C. officials released some discomfiting news: Only 52 of 187 city schools met federal Adequate Yearly Progress benchmarks in reading or math. Published November 20, 2011

SIMMONS: D.C. needs Wal-Mart sans strings

Wal-Mart and top D.C. officials shared the mayor's podium Wednesday to announce that instead of building four stores in the city, the retail giant now is hoping to plant a sustainable economic development footprint with six stores. Published November 16, 2011

SIMMONS: Head Start just another failed notion

Something very intriguing occurred this week when President Obama made his high-profile pronouncement about education policy. If you read or listened closely, you noticed how adept the president was at channeling predecessors Lyndon Baines Johnson and George W. Bush - and simultaneously, at that. Published November 9, 2011

Lanier needs to chill out on legal guns

Metropolitan Police Chief Cathy L. Lanier anticipates gun violence to escalate as colder weather settles in. That seems to be the first and most logical conclusion to statements she made Tuesday, after a night of violence in every quadrant of the District. Published November 2, 2011

SIMMONS: Anti-bully legislation misguided

Nearly every state in the union has — and the District of Columbia is considering — anti-bullying laws that allow school employees to determine whether a student is a bully. Published October 30, 2011

SIMMONS: Gray imposes shackles of a different sort

D.C. Lottery chief Buddy Roogow and other city officials are researching two scenarios I presented to them last week at an airing of the city's online gambling law. Published October 16, 2011

SIMMONS: Democracy worthy of an ID to prevent voter fraud

As states jockey for influential positions in the 2012 presidential primaries, civil-rights advocates are shifting into high gear to fight new laws that require voters to show a government-issued photo ID at the polls. Published October 9, 2011

SIMMONS: Re-creating the Tuskegee experiment?

Is the District preparing to conduct its own Tuskegee experiment? The synopsis: D.C. Council member David A. Catania is pushing legislation that would mandate mental and behavioral analyses of youths as young as 3, and city schools Chancellor Kaya Henderson testified Tuesday that she has bought into his misguided proposal. Published September 28, 2011

SIMMONS: 1-party rule unhealthy for ethics debate

The District's attorney general, Irvin B. Nathan, is slated for a tete-a-tete on government ethics this evening with the Ward 3 Democratic Committee, and because fireworks are unlikely from this biased tribe of wealthy and educated stakeholders, Republicans, independents and conservatives should crash the incestuous party. Published September 14, 2011