Scott Gelman – 草莓传媒 草莓传媒 Washington's Top 草莓传媒 Fri, 29 May 2026 12:05:59 +0000 en-US hourly 1 /wp-content/uploads/2021/05/Wtop草莓传媒Logo_500x500-150x150.png Scott Gelman – 草莓传媒 草莓传媒 32 32 To prep kids for workforce, Loudoun Co. school turns classroom into restaurant /loudoun-county/2026/05/hfr-thurs-am-to-prep-kids-for-workforce-loudoun-co-school-turns-classroom-into-restaurant/ Thu, 28 May 2026 08:18:42 +0000 /?p=29293794&preview=true&preview_id=29293794
To prep kids for workforce, Loudoun Co. school turns classroom into restaurant

A long line of teachers and staff formed just outside the Food Science Lab at Independence High School on Friday afternoon.

They reviewed a custom menu for a makeshift restaurant called 鈥淐lub Soda,鈥 and when they reached the front of the line, placed an order with a student. It was entered digitally and each order was priced, stuck to a cup, and brought inside the classroom for students to prepare.

For a fifth year, the Loudoun County school has turned the facility into a fast casual restaurant, preparing students for what could be their first paying job.

鈥淚 currently have a job as a food runner, but I’d say it definitely helps with what it’s going to be like in an actual restaurant with food running, hosting, and handling food safety and sanitation, and when it comes to handling customers and preferences,鈥 sophomore Jayda Smith said.

The students baked batches of cookies and soft pretzels in advance. The school covers the cost of the ingredients, sodas, syrups and other products.

Part of the exercise is a focus on listening while taking orders and adjusting when a customer orders something that isn鈥檛 exactly how the recipe is prepared. There鈥檚 a similar emphasis on sanitation and hygiene habits in a kitchen, including wearing a uniform and changing gloves regularly.

Students at Independence High School are learning the ropes of joining the workforce. (草莓传媒/Scott Gelman)
They reviewed a custom menu for a makeshift restaurant called 鈥淐lub Soda.鈥 (草莓传媒/Scott Gelman)
For a fifth year, the Loudoun County school has turned the facility into a fast casual restaurant, preparing students for what could be their first job. (草莓传媒/Scott Gelman)
The group created batches of cookies and soft pretzels in advance. The school covers the cost of the ingredients, sodas, syrups and other products. (草莓传媒/Scott Gelman)
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鈥淲e are preparing our students to enter into the 鈥榬eal world,鈥欌 said Alexandra Swinimer, the school鈥檚 family and consumer sciences teacher.

鈥淭hey鈥檙e those skills that we want them, and employers are telling us, that they need them to have, those soft skills. How do you talk to a customer? How do you adjust when something doesn鈥檛 go the way that you are anticipating for it to go?鈥

Sophomore Jace Flynn signed up for the class because of his interest in cooking. He enjoyed cooking with his mom at home and was eager to learn new recipes.

Friday鈥檚 exercise presented a communication challenge, he said, because there are some student workers he didn鈥檛 know. Keeping track of customer orders was also essential, 鈥渂ecause if there鈥檚 sugar free, you鈥檝e got to really pay attention to that, because the slip-ups happen real easily. You have to hold yourself accountable, make sure you really read what they want,鈥 he said.

The hope, Swinimer said, is for students to engage with teachers and staff outside of the traditional classroom setting and feel proud about making something that someone else has enjoyed.

鈥淓verybody kind of enjoys playing store, even as teenagers,鈥 Swinimer said.

The school is in talks to take the activity beyond the classroom walls, either to farmers markets or elementary school open houses.

鈥淓verybody’s feeding themselves, everybody’s getting dressed every morning, everyone’s taking care of their family unit, whatever that looks like,鈥 Swinimer said.

鈥淎nd so these classes are incredibly important for our students, because it is helping them become the citizens of the world that we want them to be.鈥

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Virginia high school student pushes for new legislation to make SAT exam accessible /loudoun-county/2026/05/why-this-va-high-schooler-lobbed-lawmakers-to-make-sat-exam-more-accessible/ Wed, 27 May 2026 00:55:14 +0000 /?p=29293619&preview=true&preview_id=29293619
How a Va. student is helping increase access to the SAT

Saniya Yamin was researching standardized testing equity for a class assignment when she learned only about half of Virginia’s high schoolers actually take the SAT exam.

Yamin, a senior at Broad Run High School in Ashburn, first thought that number was very low. But then she learned about the barriers that exist to taking the test, particularly in rural areas.

Sometimes, because of work, family obligations or distance to a testing site, it’s difficult for students to find time for the exam.

So, Yamin lobbied Loudoun County School Board members, hoping to make the exam more accessible. They appreciated the idea but said they didn’t have the availability to discuss when she pitched it.

She pivoted to state elected officials, hoping to make the SAT exam free to all Virginia students. When that idea was dismissed because of a lack of funding, she prioritized a plan requiring school boards to allow kids to take the SAT on a school day.

Inspired by Yamin’s efforts, in January. It passed through the General Assembly, and Gov. Abigail Spanberger recently signed it into law.

“It was really powerful to see how somebody’s idea can just go from something they were complaining about to their friends, to being an actual signed piece of legislation,” Yamin told 草莓传媒. “I actually had the opportunity to go meet with Gov. Spanberger last week and discuss it with her, which was really impactful to see how much she cared about how young people have ideas.”

The plan requires school boards across the Commonwealth to participate in the SAT School Day program or similar programs that allow high schoolers to take the SAT during regular school hours on the campus where they attend.

It specifies that students aren’t required to participate in the program, and the SAT window could be offered on the same day the PSAT exam is administered.

As part of the legislation, which goes into effect July 1, each high school student should get the chance to take the exam at least once during their junior or senior year.

“Usually, you would have to go out on a Saturday morning, and make that drive to go take the SAT,” Yamin said. “But now, you could just take it during the school day, and every school board will designate a specific day.”

Fairfax County high schools already host SAT School Day for high school seniors in the fall. Prince William County schools offer juniors the chance to take the SAT during the school day too. While the new legislation doesn’t waive the cost of the exam, Virginia’s two largest school districts say the exam is offered to students at no cost.

Loudoun County, meanwhile, will offer SAT School Day to juniors for the first time in the fall. In Alexandria, juniors are automatically signed up to take the SAT. Montgomery County, Maryland’s largest school system, allows students to take the test during a school day.

In signing the legislation, Spanberger said it will “allow more students to be college ready and ensure that it isn’t an issue of logistics or cost or days for kids to be able to take the vital tests that are important to their ability to apply to college or to bring credits with them to college.”

Yamin, meanwhile, is expecting it to create new opportunities for students.

“It was just a really powerful experience, and it kind of cemented that idea in my mind that young people can make a difference, and that if you have an idea, that you should speak out about it and advocate for it,” Yamin said.

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Wounded Warrior Project鈥檚 Soldier Ride 250 brings veterans to DC /dc/2026/05/wounded-warrior-projects-soldier-ride-250-brings-veterans-to-dc/ Tue, 26 May 2026 02:05:45 +0000 /?p=29290411&preview=true&preview_id=29290411
Wounded Warrior Project鈥檚 Soldier Ride 250 brings veterans to DC

As a Paralympic triathlete, Kelly Elmlinger wasn鈥檛 particularly concerned about the physical challenge the Soldier Ride 250 posed.

She鈥檚 been physically active since she was a child and was confident about the route, though she doesn鈥檛 usually ride a bike for hundreds of miles every day. As an amputee, there were other challenges she had to consider too.

Instead of focusing on the physical task of the long adaptive cycling ride, Elmlinger considered the mental toll. As an Army combat medic, there were times she wasn鈥檛 able to save somebody鈥檚 life. For a long time afterward, she worried she had failed.

Elmlinger said she spent a lot of time focusing on her mental health, and the Wounded Warrior Project’s Soldier Ride 250 offered her the chance to showcase it.

Elmlinger was part of the group that rode from Norfolk, Virginia, to the Lincoln Memorial in D.C. on Monday. The broader, 1,000-mile ride includes 80 disabled veterans, making the trek from Jacksonville, Florida, to Ground Zero in New York.

Twenty veterans are each riding 250-mile segments.

鈥淎 lot of times we look at disability just in general, as a whole society, but I don’t look at disability 鈥 matter of fact, I don’t really care for that word,鈥 Elmlinger told 草莓传媒. 鈥淚 look at it as there’s ability, and our ability may look different than, I would say, most people or the general public, but there’s still a lot of ability.鈥

The ride was organized in partnership with America250, the congressionally established group planning events across the country in honor the nation鈥檚 250th birthday this summer. It aims to honor veterans and celebrate 250 years of America鈥檚 independence.

Jason Tarboro, who was part of the group that arrived at the Lincoln Memorial, said the trek featured many hills, but 鈥渁s soon as you start feeling even a little bit tired, you have the people to your left, to your right, behind you, telling you, ‘You can keep going.’鈥

鈥淚t’s just been a beautiful, beautiful experience, lots of miles, lots of sweat, we’ve had some wipeouts, so a little bit of blood, but we’ve all made it here, safe and sound, in one piece, together,鈥 Tarboro said.

During the ride, Tarboro said he thought about his friends who were soldiers and 鈥渄idn鈥檛 make it back.鈥

For Elmlinger, who said she had a leg amputated because of toxic exposures during her early deployments, the Memorial Day decorations near the National Mall prompted similar emotions.

鈥淵ou鈥檒l find that a lot of veterans, especially the veterans here on this ride, our ability is still there,鈥 Elmlinger said. 鈥淲e can still participate, we can still give, and we can still be active members in our community.鈥

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鈥楢 hideous thing to have鈥: DC-area group pushes back on Trump鈥檚 plan for arch near Memorial Circle /dc/2026/05/a-hideous-thing-to-have-dc-area-group-pushes-back-on-trumps-plan-for-arch-near-memorial-circle/ Sun, 24 May 2026 23:18:59 +0000 /?p=29287799&preview=true&preview_id=29287799
DC-area group pushes back on Trump鈥檚 plan for arch near Memorial Circle

As the annual Rolling to Remember motorcycle ride made its way across the Memorial Bridge and toward the Lincoln Memorial on Sunday afternoon, a group gathered nearby holding signs and drawing attention to its artwork.

On the large plot of land near the Lincoln Memorial, local variations of the group Third Act protested President Donald Trump鈥檚 plan to build an arch nearby. Third Act, according to its website, is composed of elders aiming to protect democracy and the planet.

A large makeshift arch stuck in the ground said 鈥86 Trump鈥檚 Arch.鈥 One of its signs said 鈥淎rch Sanity.鈥 In honor of Memorial Day, a different version with orange letters said, 鈥淭hey fought for democracy, will you?鈥

The group has planned a three-day demonstration, scheduled through Tuesday night, with the goal of highlighting its opposition to the arch. It initially asked the National Park Service for a permit to gather at Memorial Circle, where the arch is planned to be built.

But they were told it wasn鈥檛 allowed because the federal agency has already secured a permit there for the arch construction, according to Susan Douglas, with Third Act Virginia.

鈥淭he arch is gaudy. It’s way too big and it interrupts a very important historical sightline between the Lincoln Memorial here and across the bridge, the Lee House, which is in Arlington Cemetery,鈥 Douglas told 草莓传媒. 鈥淭hat is a sightline that should not be interrupted.鈥

The group鈥檚 criticism comes days after the U.S. Commission of Fine Arts approved the design for the triumphal arch.

In June, the National Capital Planning Commission is scheduled to discuss the project. Inspections at the arch site started earlier this month.

It鈥檚 unclear how much the arch project will cost, but a White House official told The Associated Press it likely will be paid for using taxpayer and private funds.

The 250-foot arch is planned for Memorial Circle, and it would include phrases such as 鈥淟iberty and Justice for All.鈥 It would feature an observation deck open to the public.

The Federal Aviation Administration is studying the possible risks the arch could pose to flights taking off and landing at nearby Reagan National Airport, .

Donna Shaunesey said she joined the demonstration because her parents are buried at Arlington National Cemetery.

鈥淚 just think it鈥檚 a hideous thing to have happen here,鈥 Shaunesey said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e just here to make sure that this craziness, people pay attention.鈥

There are several rallies scheduled each day and light projections at night. A choreographed dance across the Memorial Bridge is scheduled, as is a protest during the evening commute Tuesday.

Douglas said with a lot of signs, 鈥淲e will express our concern about all the issues that we see, not just the arch, and support for vets,鈥 Douglas said.

鈥淲e should not be upending the beauty of Washington, D.C., for a vanity project for Trump,鈥 Douglas added.

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鈥楻olling to Remember鈥 brings thousands of motorcyclists to DC /dc/2026/05/rolling-to-remember-brings-thousands-of-motorcyclists-to-dc/ Sun, 24 May 2026 19:48:10 +0000 /?p=29287233&preview=true&preview_id=29287233
鈥楻olling to Remember鈥 brings thousands of motorcyclists to DC

After finishing Sunday鈥檚 annual motorcycle ride from the Pentagon to the National Mall, J.R. May parked his bike along Constitution Avenue and reflected.

He鈥檚 attended the 鈥淩olling to Remember鈥 ride for several years. He noticed many people lining the streets near the Lincoln Memorial to watch the event, and worried they may have thought it was all part of a parade.

Instead, though, May said thousands of people from across the world congregate in the D.C. region ahead of Memorial Day weekend to increase awareness that some service members are still missing. Others are suffering from PTSD.

Sunday marked the 38th consecutive year of the ride, according to the event鈥檚 website.

鈥淲e鈥檙e remembering people that have died in the past and have been captured, going through PTSD and having trouble with that,鈥 May, from Kentucky, told 草莓传媒.

The group departed from the Pentagon and crossed the Arlington Memorial Bridge before driving toward the National Mall.

Some honked and blasted the 鈥淪tar Spangled Banner.鈥 Others attached large American flags to the back of their motorcycles.

鈥淭his is my hometown, and to me, they do it right on Veterans Day and Memorial Day,鈥 Carol King said. 鈥淢y husband was a Marine Corps vet. I want to do what I can.鈥

Mary Lanphere felt similarly.

鈥淚 love our veterans, and I am so thankful for everything that they’ve done for me and for this country,鈥 Lanphere said.

鈥淲e can’t pay them back enough, but the one thing we can do is never forget them and always respect the service that they have given to us.鈥

Groups formed along the route, as some onlookers waved as motorcyclists drove by and honked.

鈥淭hey’re paying honor to those who gave the ultimate sacrifice for this country,鈥 Kurt Chambers said.

鈥淔or those folks to take time out of their schedule and come here and do this ride, it’s pretty awesome to me.鈥

Susan Baker, from Gaithersburg, Maryland, said she attends the annual event as often as she鈥檚 able to.

鈥淚 had friends that died in Vietnam, friends that are still in pain from Vietnam. It means a lot to me,鈥 Baker said.

Roy Emanuelson had participated in the ride in previous years and said it鈥檚 essential for the public to recognize the meaning of the Memorial Day holiday.

鈥淚t’s to remember the veterans who’ve lost their lives in combat and in serving the country, that’s the most important part, remembering that,鈥 Emanuelson said.

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How Virginia’s new balcony solar law could cut your utility bill /virginia/2026/05/how-virginias-new-balcony-solar-law-could-cut-your-utility-bill/ Fri, 22 May 2026 15:06:03 +0000 /?p=29279228&preview=true&preview_id=29279228
How Virginia鈥檚 new balcony solar law could cut your utility bill

A new law scheduled to go into effect next year could help Virginians lower the cost of their utility bill.

Gov. Abigail Spanberger has signed that will allow homeowners and renters to begin using plug-in solar systems. Introduced by Del. Paul Krizek and Senate Majority Leader Scott Surovell, the plan made its way through the General Assembly earlier this year.

While rooftop solar systems may be unaffordable for some Virginians, plug-in or balcony systems make the concept more accessible. The idea is widely popular across Europe, and .

“Part of it is the emotional bit about being able to say, ‘I’m doing something,'” said Jamie Bacon, who lobbied Krizek to move forward with the legislation. “I think you can save maybe $20 to $30 a month with a small system, which adds up.”

The process usually involves two to four solar panels, making it smaller scale than a rooftop setup.

It gets plugged into an outlet and “it allows you to start producing some of the electricity that you’re using in your home during that period of time when the sun is shining; and therefore, you’re drawing less from the utility and lowering your bill,” said Bob Soule, an electric coach with Go Electric DMV.

The legislation bans companies from creating interconnection requirements, charging fees related to the device or requiring their approval before installing or using the device. The companies aren’t responsible for damage or injury it may cause, the bill said, and the State Corporation Commission will have to develop and publish a notification form for customers to fill out to indicate they’re using plug-in solar.

Bacon, who lives in a condo in Fairfax County, said she knows renters and owners who would be eager to put a solar system on their balcony. During the legislative process, there was “a little pushback from Dominion,” she said.

It does let landlords create “reasonable restrictions” for size and placement of the small devices.

“What these bills do is it establishes the ground rules, make sure they’re safe, it establishes a certain limit on the size, so that it’s not going to overpower the utility, and certain reporting requirements to let the utility know that you’ve got one of these systems,” Soule said.

As the idea becomes more widespread, Soule said the systems should be available online at places, such as Costco, Home Depot or Ikea.

The plan allows for a device that has a maximum power output of 1,200 watts. It’s scheduled to take effect Jan. 1, and Soule is expecting it to be broadly appealing.

“I have a number of relatives who are quite conservative, and they’re really all into the solar stuff,” Soule said. “I think there’ll be a lot of people who might not otherwise be interested in other of these new energy technologies who will say, ‘Hey, this plug-in solar thing appeals to me.'”

A plug-in solar panel leaning on its frame.
A new Virginia law allows plug-in solar panels to produce up to 1,200 watts. (Courtesy Bright Saver)
A pair of plug-in solar panels leaning against a house's stone wall, beneath another plug-in panel.
Plug-in setups usually involve only two to four solar panels. (Courtesy Bright Saver)
A pair of solar panels stand upright in a backyard.
Plug-in solar panels are widely popular across Europe, and Utah legalized them last year. (Courtesy Bright Saver)
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A plug-in solar panel leaning on its frame.
A pair of plug-in solar panels leaning against a house's stone wall, beneath another plug-in panel.
A pair of solar panels stand upright in a backyard.

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A year after opening, does Southeast DC trust Cedar Hill hospital? /local/2026/05/a-year-after-opening-does-southeast-dc-trust-cedar-hill-hospital/ Thu, 21 May 2026 07:58:56 +0000 /?p=29275617&preview=true&preview_id=29275617
A year after opening, does Southeast DC trust Cedar Hill hospital?

Tom Donohue was taken to Cedar Hill Regional Medical Center in Southeast D.C. by ambulance last July.

When he arrived, he wasn鈥檛 triaged. Instead, he was rolled in the hospital鈥檚 waiting room. He spent hours there.

An Advisory Neighborhood Commissioner, Donohue texted a colleague who worked at the hospital at the time about his experience. He was admitted for almost a week, and heard similar stories from staff about not having enough employees and being overworked.

The ordeal prompted Donohue to question whether the hospital opened too soon.

The facility opened last spring, and it was touted as an opportunity to transform healthcare in Southeast. While some residents view it as a much-needed community resource, others are worried a series of challenges may discourage people from receiving necessary medical care.

鈥淭he harm that鈥檚 being done to Cedar Hill and its reputation is alarming,鈥 Donohue said. 鈥淲e need Cedar Hill on so many levels. The disparities in care over so long of a time here in Ward 8 has been alarming.鈥

D.C. covered most of the roughly $434 million to build the hospital. The site has 136 beds and a 54-bay emergency department. It also boasts maternal health and delivery care, including a Level II neonatal intensive care unit, and five operating rooms.

But there were delays in offering many of the promised outpatient services, and residents who visited the emergency department reported long wait times. CEO Anthony Coleman stepped down from the role in March.

鈥淭he former hospital, United Medical Center, ended up at the end of the day having a better reputation than the new hospital, Cedar Hill,鈥 community health advocate Ambrose Lane Jr. said.

鈥淚t鈥檚 going to take years to repair the image that Cedar Hill now has in the community.鈥

The hospital declined 草莓传媒鈥檚 request to interview interim CEO Kimberlee Daniels. A spokeswoman didn鈥檛 respond to a list of questions or multiple requests for comment.

During a D.C. Council hearing last month, Daniels largely defended the hospital鈥檚 quality of care but acknowledged the wait times and staffing challenges.

Cedar Hill averaged 359 admissions per month from July through December, Daniels said, compared to 228 during the same period at United Medical Center in 2024.

A D.C. Fire and EMS spokesman said a complex set of criteria, including whether a hospital is operating on bypass, is used to determine which hospital an ambulance is routed to.

Meanwhile, Daniels said the hospital followed the 鈥渟tandard process鈥 new hospitals use to seek Medicare certification and Joint Commission accreditation.

Earlier this year, D.C.鈥檚 Department of Health gave the hospital an immediate jeopardy citation over issues with schedules for surgery. The citation represents a situation in which noncompliance has placed the health and safety of patients at risk, .

Hospital officials said they have fixed the problem that led to the city intervention.

The hospital has 574 full-time staff members and 67 nursing vacancies, which are getting covered by nurse staffing agencies, Daniels told the Council. The facility is also in 鈥渁dvanced discussions鈥 with George Washington University and its Medical Faculty Associates 鈥渞egarding a potential transition of physician employment and clinical operations,鈥 she said.

Regarding long wait times, Daniels said because community demand exceeded that of the hospital鈥檚 predecessor, there were initial challenges.

鈥淲e have made meaningful progress in reducing wait times and improving patient flow, including reductions in patients leaving without being seen,鈥 Daniels said.

A new freestanding emergency department that UHS is building in Ward 7 could help ease wait times too, Daniels told the Council.

Despite those challenges, some residents are grateful the hospital is available to them.

Michelle Warren, a recent Cedar Hill patient, said the quality of care is excellent, but 鈥渋t being a new hospital, I guess a lot people as well as myself in the community felt like it could have been a lot faster, especially with certain emergencies.鈥

Samuel, who works nearby, said Cedar Hill is 鈥渂etter than the old hospital. It鈥檚 helping a lot of us, and it鈥檚 closer for a lot of us to get to, too.鈥

For Donohue, the hospital鈥檚 reputation is on the line. Correcting mistakes and addressing challenges, he said, are essential in order for the community to be confident in the care the hospital offers.

鈥淭his is the place where we go, where we’re supposed to trust to go, for healthcare, to get better, Donohue said. 鈥淚f the community doesn’t trust the care that’s coming out of it, it’s going to fail.鈥

Street view of Cedar Hill Regional Medical Center.
The long-awaited new hospital has struggled with delays in offering some services, and visitors reported long wait times. (草莓传媒/Scott Gelman)
A sign reading "Cedar Hill Regional Medical Center" sits in the middle of a lawn at the confluence of two concrete pathways.
Cedar Hill Regional Medical Center, which opened last spring, was touted as an opportunity to transform healthcare in Southeast D.C. (草莓传媒/ Scott Gelman)
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Street view of Cedar Hill Regional Medical Center.
A sign reading "Cedar Hill Regional Medical Center" sits in the middle of a lawn at the confluence of two concrete pathways.

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DC teacher uses ‘bike bus’ to boost attendance, improve safety /dc/2026/05/dc-teacher-uses-bike-bus-to-boost-attendance-improve-safety/ Wed, 20 May 2026 08:14:44 +0000 /?p=29271432&preview=true&preview_id=29271432
DC teacher uses 鈥榖ike bus鈥 to boost attendance, improve safety

After noticing that students started arriving at school late in the morning, physical education teacher Alex Clark of Dunbar High School created a plan to try and change the habit.

Around the time of the pandemic, he considered ways to use bikes to solve problems in the community. With attendance rates in the morning hours “a bit of a struggle,” Clark launched a “bike bus” to incentivize kids to show up on time.

Because students who attend the Northwest D.C. campus come from different parts of the city, the school serves as a meeting place. Then, the group rides to whatever event Clark has organized for that day.

The concept has motivated students to be prompt and Clark said it helps them avoid traffic headaches in the car. The campus is situated near First Street and New York Avenue, and there’s a different school right behind it.

“Sometimes, our students get shunned or highlighted and spotlighted in the wrong way,” Clark said.

“But, there’s a lot of students that want to learn, that want to be a part of something, and so just providing them that safe space before school is our goal with it all.”

Clark has led the bike bus to Lululemon for a yoga activation and to Audi Field for a tour. The students typically get fed during the pre-class outings, Clark said, “and we try to get them learning right away.”

Senior Ziyale Freeman rides his bike to school most of the time, finding it easier than a car because of less traffic and the ability to cut through side streets and alleys.

“We’re in D.C., and it’s a lot of bad drivers,” Freeman said.

“You can’t really drive for yourself, you’ve gotta drive for other people. On a bike, I feel like that’s not the same thing. You could go where you want, drive as fast as you want.”

Clark has inspired some of the kids to join the school’s competitive cycling team, and others are eager to learn how to fix a bike and make repairs through the mechanic program.

“It’s not just biking to school, but it’s also all of the things that cycling can offer our young people,” Clark said.

Senior Tsai Parker sometimes bikes to school because it’s “easier to get around.”

Separately, Clark’s bike tech class teaches students the fundamentals of repairs, but the goal isn’t for students to become bike mechanics, “but for you guys to learn how to use your hands, you guys learn how to be creative, you guys learn how to work together, how to solve problems,” he said.

person fixing bike
Alex Clark’s “bike to bus” program also teaches students at Dunbar High School how to fix bikes. (草莓传媒/Scott Gelman)

Senior Shae’Niah Butler said the class taught her how to change the tires, “pump the bikes up, and I also learned how to ride bikes.”

Clark attributes his success and aspirations to his mentors. He’s hoping to use the bike bus and his classroom to pay it forward.

“They were always trying to pour into me in different ways, and so that’s what I hope that I can do for my kids,” Clark said.

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Virginia Gov. Spanberger vetoes proposal for legalized marijuana marketplace /virginia/2026/05/virginia-governor-spanberger-planning-to-veto-plan-for-legalized-marijuana-marketplace/ Tue, 19 May 2026 18:53:26 +0000 /?p=29270489&preview=true&preview_id=29270489 Virginia Gov. Abigail Spanberger has vetoed legislation that would have created a legalized marijuana marketplace but is vowing to work with elected officials to resume work on plan ahead of the next General Assembly session.

In a statement Tuesday afternoon, Spanberger said the plan, as is, would have created a retail market without the “timeline, structure or resources to be successfully implemented.”

“As Virginia pursues a legal retail market, it is critical that we incorporate lessons learned by other states and ensure that our regulatory framework is fully prepared to provide strong oversight from day one,” Spanberger said. “That includes clear enforcement authority and sufficient resources for compliance, testing, and inspections, and robust tools to crack down on bad actors who continue to profit from the illicit market.”

Spanberger sent the plan that passed through the Virginia General Assembly this winter back to lawmakers with dozens of proposed changes. But the state officials opposed over 40 of them and sent the legislation back to her desk.

Former Gov. Glenn Youngkin vetoed a similar plan to create the legalized marketplace, but Democrats in Virginia anticipated Spanberger would sign it.

Lawmakers previously OK’d a plan allowing adults to legally have up to an ounce of marijuana and creating a path to grow up to four plants inside homes. However, there hasn’t been a formal marketplace, a step some leaders say facilitated the creation of an illicit market for cannabis in Virginia.

The proposal that lawmakers approved would have had the retail market opening Jan. 1, with oversight from the Virginia Cannabis Control Authority. Anyone who is 21 or older would be able to buy marijuana, and there would be 350 retail stores statewide.

But Spanberger called for retail sales to begin July 1, 2027, and proposed a series of changes to criminal penalties tied to marijuana possession. She also proposed changing the penalty for public consumption to a Class 4 misdemeanor. It’s currently a civil penalty.

A separate proposed change would have reduced the personal possession limit to 2 ounces instead of 2.5 ounces.

Sen. Lashrecse Aird and Del. Paul Krizek, who crafted the House and Senate versions of the proposal, said in a statement the legislation was the product of years of stakeholder engagement and extensive deliberation.聽

“The General Assembly provided Virginia with an opportunity to lead on this issue, but instead this veto prolongs uncertainty and provides comfort to those profiting from the illicit market. This veto and its consequences belong to the Governor and Governor alone,” their joint statement said.

Some lawmakers have said the current rules allow for an illicit market to form.

The General Assembly could explore a path to a legalized marijuana marketplace again during next year’s session.

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How this DC-area chef is using food to expose more people to Lao culture /food-restaurant/2026/05/how-this-dc-area-chef-is-using-food-to-expose-more-people-to-lao-culture/ Tue, 19 May 2026 08:09:57 +0000 /?p=29267574&preview=true&preview_id=29267574
DC-area chef spreading Lao culture through food

Years ago, a couple was shopping at the Giant supermarket near Bangkok Golden in Northern Virginia when they decided to give the restaurant a try.

They were both vegetarian and scanned the menu. Restaurant workers told them the kitchen could also prepare Lao dishes and offered to make them laab tofu, a dish of tofu with herbs and soy sauce.

When they were finished, the pair asked to speak to Chef Seng Luangrath. They shared how much they enjoyed the dish, had never heard of Lao food before and were unaware it even existed.

In that moment, Luangrath shared a mission she has detailed dozens of times since. Lao food is not a secret, she told them, and it鈥檚 actually a major part of the D.C.-area culinary scene.

Initially reluctant to introduce the public to her culture through food, Luangrath now strives to do just that through her restaurants in Northern Virginia and D.C. It鈥檚 a deeply personal goal that鈥檚 thrust Lao food into the national spotlight.

鈥淚 want people to know, if I say, 鈥業’m from Laos,鈥 it was like, 鈥極h yeah, I know Laos,’ and ‘Oh, I had Lao food before,鈥欌 Luangrath told 草莓传媒.

Luangrath and her family fled Laos during the Vietnam War. They spent two years in a refugee camp in Thailand before arriving in the U.S. in 1983.

Luangrath started cooking for her family when she was 14. She was shy and fearful of speaking in public, and learned a lot from her grandmother. Her grandmother was the first to teach her to cook, so the dishes at and honor not just the Lao culture, but also her family.

鈥淲e came from a country where we were taught not to showcase our food, because we were afraid no one else would like to eat it, because of the spice and also the funkiness,鈥 Luangrath said.

Lao food wasn鈥檛 mainstream, and it would have been easier for families in her parents鈥 generation to open Thai restaurants, Luangrath said.

The cuisines are similar, but Lao recipes use a different fish sauce, lots of shrimp paste and chili peppers that make it spicy, she said. Sticky rice comes as a complement to the main dishes, not as a dessert, and Lao food features fish and proteins that are grilled or steamed rather than fried.

As she considered her next steps, Luangrath had a gut instinct tell her that she needed to expose more people to Lao food and her culture.

鈥淭he most important thing is having my identity back,鈥 Luangrath said. 鈥淭elling people who I am without being shy about it. I鈥檓 Lao and this is Lao food I鈥檓 cooking for the people.鈥

Using that same confidence, Luangrath changed the name of Bangkok Garden in 2017 to , which is a type of fermented fish sauce.

In 2014, she opened Thip Khao, which she described as the home of the Lao Food Movement. The restaurant earned 鈥淏est New Restaurant鈥 recognition from Bon Appetit Magazine, and Luangrath has been featured in other major publications, including The New York Times.

On Thursday night, in Baan Mae鈥檚 small downstairs kitchen, Luangrath prepared shrimp laab and helped shape a popular snack.

Now, instead of on a secret menu, as she offered the couple casually wandering in years ago, Lao food is prominently featured.

And she鈥檚 working to keep it that way.

鈥淪howcasing my family, the history, the culture,鈥 Luangrath said. 鈥淭he most important thing is putting Laos on the map.鈥

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Fairfax Co. parents concerned about students accessing 鈥楩ive Nights at Epstein鈥檚鈥 game at school /fairfax-county/2026/05/fairfax-co-parents-concerned-about-students-accessing-five-nights-at-epsteins-game-at-school/ Fri, 15 May 2026 08:01:26 +0000 /?p=29254706&preview=true&preview_id=29254706 A few years ago, Erin Dyal reviewed a list of websites her son visited on his Fairfax County school-issued device.

She flipped her phone horizontally to see the entire URLs, and noticed one had the phrase 鈥渉istory tutor.鈥 Initially, she was confused. History was her son鈥檚 best subject, so it didn鈥檛 seem clear why he may need extra help.

Then, Dyal visited the website herself. She realized it wasn鈥檛 a history assistance tool. It was a gaming site.

Dyal is part of the parent-led group FCPS Parents for Intentional Technology, which has been advocating for stricter rules on screen time during the school day and urging division leaders to reconsider the one-to-one student device policy.

Part of the advocacy is raising awareness about inappropriate games and websites students are still accessing.

鈥淭here鈥檚 no way that they鈥檙e going to keep up with blocking these games,鈥 Dyal said. 鈥淏ut at a minimum, they need to block peer-to-peer sharing. They need to plug the holes on all of these other leaks. And if students continue to get around them, then maybe that student just isn鈥檛 ready for a computer.鈥

Inside a shared Google Drive, Dyal said students seem to have access to games, pirated movies and entire seasons of shows. They may be logging into their own Gmail accounts and circumventing restrictions, she said, or they may also be accessing proxies.

Through all of that, several parents have observed students playing a game called 鈥淔ive Nights at Epstein鈥檚.鈥 The game tasks users with trying to escape from financier and sex offender Jeffery Epstein鈥檚 private island.

鈥淚t鈥檚 alarming to hear that the kids are accessing that, and finding ways to work around the restrictions that we have set in our county,鈥 Megan Durst, another parent, said.

Other games are gambling-related, Michelle Dirst, another member of the parents’ group, told 草莓传媒.

What’s being done about content moderation

In a statement, a Fairfax County schools spokeswoman said the division uses a multilayered approach to prevent inappropriate access to content rather than depending on a single filter or blocklist.

鈥淭hat includes , classroom monitoring tools, parent visibility tools, vendor escalation, cybersecurity monitoring, and school-based intervention,鈥 the district said. 鈥淔CPS monitors new proxy site usage daily and is investing in additional resources to improve the speed of proxy blocking, with recent blocks being implemented substantially faster.

Asked specifically about student access to the game 鈥淔ive Nights at Epstein鈥檚,鈥 a Montgomery County schools spokeswoman said the game has been flagged and the division is blocking it.

It鈥檚 also blocked in Prince William County schools, a spokeswoman told 草莓传媒.

Loudoun County鈥檚 Department of Digital Innovation is aware of the game, and a spokesman said the district 鈥渉as taken steps to ensure students cannot access it on their school issued devices. DDI is extremely vigilant and always on the lookout for sites, code and other inappropriate material that needs to be blocked from our devices and network.鈥

In Fairfax, Dyal said teachers are faced with challenges in their classrooms, because they didn鈥檛 sign up 鈥渢o be laptop police.鈥

“But the gaming, there鈥檚 no reason why students should be playing games in class and people not shutting that down,鈥 Dyal said.

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Battle over high school crossing guards divides Fairfax County leaders /fairfax-county/2026/05/what-i-sent-the-bimbo-battle-over-high-school-crossing-guards-divides-fairfax-co-leaders/ Thu, 14 May 2026 19:58:19 +0000 /?p=29253412&preview=true&preview_id=29253412 Crossing guards will no longer be assigned to Fairfax County high schools starting in the fall, a shift that has some parents and elected officials in the Northern Virginia suburb concerned about student safety.

The guards will continue to work at the county鈥檚 three secondary schools and at the district鈥檚 elementary and middle schools.

The change is tied to the county鈥檚 fiscal 2027 budget, and it鈥檚 the second consecutive budget cycle that crossing guards at high schools have been debated. Last spring, however, the county鈥檚 Board of Supervisors provided one-time funding to keep the crossing guard positions intact.

The county鈥檚 crossing guard program is run through the Fairfax County Police Department. The agency has a contract with All City Management Services, and as of mid-March, there were 17 crossing guard vacancies, which are covered by sworn officers.

Thirty-one schools are staffed by All City Management Services.

The change has some Fairfax County parents and school board members concerned about student safety. But the police department told supervisors that Fairfax County is the only Northern Virginia jurisdiction that provides crossing guards at high schools.

In neighboring Prince William County, the police department similarly oversees the crossing guard program. There, a spokesman said there are crossing guards at two high schools, but they primarily serve to help with traffic, not in a traditional way crossing guards operate. Prince William County is likely to move to only have elementary and middle school crossing guards soon, he said.

Fairfax County police told officials there haven鈥檛 been any crashes recorded at high schools crossings, so 鈥淔CPD does not have crash or injury data indicating that removing high school crossing guards would have a negative impact. Research indicates that teen pedestrian risk is primarily driven by distractions occurring outside supervised crosswalks, an issue that crossing guards do not address.鈥

Based on initial budget documents, cutting the high school crossing guards will save the county close to $2 million.

The Board of Supervisors adopted the fiscal 2027 budget earlier this month. The budget year starts July 1.

Group chat discord

In a newsletter earlier this month, school board member Melanie Meren praised Supervisors Walter Alcorn and Rodney Lusk for rejecting the county鈥檚 budget markups and working to keep the high school crossing guard program intact.

鈥淪o in the exact locations with the newest drivers, safety precautions are being removed!鈥 Meren wrote.

In private text messages that Meren has posted on social media, Board of Supervisors Chairman Jeff McKay criticized her newsletter comments and told her to apologize to the county executive, who works on the county鈥檚 budget.

Then, in a group chat with Meren and County Executive Bryan Hill, McKay sent a screenshot of his initial messages to Meren and wrote, 鈥淲hat I sent the bimbo.鈥

When Meren asked if she was the 鈥渂imbo鈥 he referred to, McKay wrote 鈥測es, because you have everyone here angry as heck and it costs the schools.鈥

Meren said in an emailed statement that while she was “shocked” by what McKay said about her, she’s “more concerned about the Chairman鈥檚 sense of entitlement about having unilateral authority on public spending.鈥

McKay apologized for his words, admitting that he used an “inappropriate term while referring to School Board Member Meren that was disrespectful and wrong, and I apologize for it.”

McKay added that disagreements are fair to discuss and he should have expressed his views professionally.

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Va. governor concerned redistricting battle could make voters reluctant to cast ballot this fall /virginia/2026/05/va-governor-concerned-redistricting-battle-could-make-voters-reluctant-to-cast-ballot-this-fall/ Thu, 14 May 2026 08:11:09 +0000 /?p=29250704&preview=true&preview_id=29250704 Days after Virginia Democrats filed an emergency appeal with the U.S. Supreme Court as part of their ongoing redistricting battle, Gov. Abigail Spanberger said she鈥檚 focused on the fall midterm elections and ensuring voters are motivated to turn out.

After a bill signing at Inova Schar Cancer Institute on Wednesday, Spanberger made her most extensive public comments about the state鈥檚 redistricting plan. She cited the state鈥檚 May 12 deadline for any map changes, and said as a result, this year鈥檚 elections will proceed under the current map.

Spanberger鈥檚 remarks came a few days after Virginia鈥檚 Supreme Court struck down the Democrat-led redistricting push. Primaries in the state are scheduled for Aug. 4, with the November general election to follow.

鈥淲hat needs to happen is we need to focus on the task at hand, which is winning races in November,鈥 Spanberger said.

鈥淚 believe, somewhat doggedly, that we will win two to four seats in the House of Representatives. 鈥 That is my goal. That is what I know is possible.鈥

The map Democrats proposed, experts said, could have resulted in a 10-1 Democratic majority representing Virginia in the U.S. House. But Republicans challenged the process Democrats in the General Assembly used to put the constitutional amendment before voters.

In a 4-3 opinion issued Friday morning, Virginia鈥檚 Supreme Court sided with the Republican challengers.

U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts gave Republicans until Thursday evening to respond to Democrats鈥 request for the emergency appeal.

Spanberger defended the process the General Assembly used, adding: 鈥淚 think I certainly would have wanted to, and did want to, see a different outcome with the Supreme Court ruling.鈥

Over three million people participated in the rare April special election, and Spanberger said she鈥檚 concerned those voters 鈥渉ave had the experience of casting a ballot in an election that was very important to them, including those on both sides of the referendum vote, only to have it be overturned, essentially, by the Supreme Court of Virginia.鈥

Elected officials, she said, will have to work to ensure 鈥渢hat people know that their votes do matter, and that when it comes to the ballot they鈥檙e going to cast 鈥 whether it鈥檚 for a primary over the summer or for the general election into the fall 鈥 that they shouldn鈥檛 feel depleted or defeated, that their votes matter.鈥

Spanberger called the appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court 鈥渋mportant, but when it comes to the execution of elections, no matter the outcome in that case, we will be running our elections beginning next month with early voting on the current maps that we have.鈥

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In Fairfax, Spanberger signs bills aimed at lowering healthcare costs for Virginians /virginia/2026/05/in-fairfax-spanberger-signs-bills-aimed-at-lowering-healthcare-costs-for-virginians/ Wed, 13 May 2026 23:04:21 +0000 /?p=29250392&preview=true&preview_id=29250392
Spanberger signs bills aimed at lowering healthcare costs

Virginia Gov. Abigail Spanberger signed a series of healthcare bills Wednesday, aimed at lowering the cost of insulin and promising that insurance company rules won鈥檛 delay necessary medical care.

The signing ceremony, which took place at Inova鈥檚 Schar Cancer Institute, featured many elected officials representing Northern Virginia in the General Assembly.

Spanberger said many of the measures passed through the Commonwealth鈥檚 legislative body with bipartisan support, and she touted the new laws as part of the affordability agenda on which she campaigned.

鈥淲e just had quite a few bills specific to the needs of Virginians, making sure that we are increasing access and ensuring that patients can get the care that, importantly, their doctors intend and want to deliver. And that parents and families are supported with policies that we have here in the Commonwealth of Virginia,鈥 Spanberger told reporters after the event.

One measure, spearheaded by Del. Karrie Delaney, decreases the out-of-pocket cost for a 30-day supply of insulin from $50 to $35. It also includes a cap of $35 for a 30-day supply of equipment and supplies.

The change is scheduled to go into effect July 1.

鈥淭his is making a life-saving difference on so many families 鈥 for hundreds of thousands of Virginians, in fact,” Spanberger said.

law signing
Virginia Gov. Abigail Spanberger signs several laws aimed at lowering healthcare costs. (草莓传媒/Scott Gelman)

Separately, Spanberger signed a bill that adds doula care, infertility treatment and hearing aids to Virginia鈥檚 Essential Health Benefits. The EHB includes the benefits that individual and small group health insurance plans have to provide.

That measure is scheduled to take effect Jan. 1 because it has to receive approval from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.

House and Senate bills also signed by Spanberger aim to stop insurance companies 鈥渇rom quietly reducing what they can pay on a claim behind closed doors,鈥 the governor said.

Spanberger signed Del. Michelle Maldonado鈥檚 plan that restricts insurance companies from using prior authorization as a reason to delay or deny care that doctors have approved and deemed necessary.

鈥淏ecause of these bills, when your family needs care, you can get it,鈥 Spanberger said. 鈥淲hen your doctor writes you a prescription, you should be able to afford it. And when you get sick, the cost of getting better shouldn’t break a family’s bank. But this is not the reality for far too many Virginians.鈥

Martin Figueroa, Virginia鈥檚 secretary of health and human resources, said, 鈥漌e’re living through a moment when the federal government is making decisions about healthcare that will reach into the lives of ordinary Virginians in ways most people haven’t fully felt yet.鈥

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Some DC-area high schools let students order food to the school. But is it safe? /local/2026/05/how-common-are-student-food-deliveries-across-dc-area-school-systems/ Wed, 13 May 2026 08:09:50 +0000 /?p=29246765&preview=true&preview_id=29246765 Sometimes, when Dawn Iannaco-Hahn tried to pick her kids up early from Blake High School so they can attend a doctor鈥檚 appointment, she鈥檇 strategically try to plan it around lunch time.

As she approached the Montgomery County school鈥檚 main office, waiting to be let in, she often noticed school staff manning what she described as the 鈥淒oorDash table鈥 鈥 the space where food delivery drivers would leave students鈥 orders.

Last year, the school had an outright ban on food deliveries. But students told drivers to meet them at the bottom of a nearby hill instead of driving onto school property. So this fall, staff set up a table to facilitate all of the deliveries made on any given day.

In the aftermath of a late April shooting in the Blake High School parking lot, the school announced several changes to bolster security. Banning food deliveries on the campus was among them.

Montgomery County, Maryland鈥檚 largest school district, doesn鈥檛 have a districtwide policy banning student food deliveries and the rules vary from campus to campus. Few D.C.-area districts have policies addressing that.

DoorDash vs. school lunch

Chris Cram, a district spokesman, told 草莓传媒 there鈥檚 鈥渘ot a guideline, regulation or policy, but this is something that it seems needs to be addressed as a safety matter, much as has been done for Blake HS.鈥

Parents skeptical of the idea raised those safety concerns, but others said it鈥檚 a convenient alternative for their kids.

鈥淓verybody harps back about, 鈥榃ell, your kids have the option to pack,鈥欌 said Lisa Castillo, whose kids attend Damascus High School.

鈥淏ut they don鈥檛. High school, you鈥檙e preparing them for college, so mommy and daddy are not packing lunches every day. These kids have to learn to pack their own lunches because they just throw away what they don鈥檛 eat and that鈥檚 just wasteful.鈥

Sometimes, Castillo said, students order in groups with friends to help cut down on delivery fees. Drivers often pick up several orders if they know they鈥檙e going to the same school, she said.

Juniors and seniors at Damascus have open lunch, she said, which enables them to leave the school campus if they choose to. But Castillo said the open lunch concept is largely a privilege for kids who have cars and drive to school.

Nonetheless, she prefers her kids order the food to be delivered so they don鈥檛 have to leave. They place orders two or three times each week.

Packed lunches come in stapled bags

Delivery drivers push a button asking to be let into the office, are allowed in and then put the orders on a communal table, Castillo said.

鈥淭hey鈥檙e not ordering Ruth鈥檚 Chris (Steak House),鈥 Castillo said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a small area of delivery places that they could even walk to. 鈥 I don鈥檛 like them leaving the grounds. So we have a Chick-fil-A in Mount Airy that can be delivered, a Burger King, Starbucks, Hornet鈥檚 Nest, Ledo Pizza.鈥

Conversely, Iannaco-Hahn said her kids only ordered food delivery during the school day if they鈥檙e paying for it.

鈥淭hey could either use their school lunch money to buy school lunch that I put on their accounts or they can make their own lunch at home,鈥 Iannaco-Hahn said.

Some Northern Virginia students, though, don鈥檛 face that choice.

Fairfax County Public Schools doesn鈥檛 allow kids to have food delivered to schools by delivery drivers, a spokeswoman said.

Nearby Prince William County schools don鈥檛 have a policy that restricts food deliveries, but a division spokeswoman said schools 鈥済enerally prohibit third-party delivery to students during the school day. Parents who wish to bring food for their child are encouraged to contact the school in advance to make appropriate arrangements.鈥

Loudoun County doesn鈥檛 have a districtwide ban either, and in some high schools, there鈥檚 a table inside the door for student and staff deliveries to be placed, a spokesman said.

A D.C. Public Schools spokesman didn鈥檛 respond to 草莓传媒’s question about whether the city allows food deliveries.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a big thing,鈥 Iannaco-Hahn said. 鈥淎 lot of schools have the same thing, where they鈥檙e getting tons of food deliveries.鈥

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