Washington, D.C
Students at ease after judge blocks Trump cuts to Upward Bound
Four years ago, high school senior Aaron O’Brien wouldn’t believe he’d be studying chemistry now. Thanks to the Upward Bound program, that’s not hard to believe anymore.
“Before I came into the program, whew I don’t know who that man was,” O’Brien said.
Through free tutoring, test prep and college visits weekly, Upward Bound has helped millions of students like O’Brien, who attends McKinley Tech High School, pursue higher education.
The program is coordinated by colleges like George Washington University.
“The program has really expanded my vision for the future,” O’Brien said.
He joined Upward Bound as a freshman in high school.
“I never imagined I would be in these spaces and be able to network with so many different people,” he said.
“Upward Bound is basically a family,” said Layla Leiva, a senior at DC International School.
“A lot of us are first generation or low income. My parents do not know what the common app is, or standardized testing, and being able to have students that I can relate to meant the world for me,” she said.
Upward Bound falls under a series of federal TRIO programs funded by the Department of Education. Several programs in the series help veterans, students with disabilities, limited English and those facing foster care and homelessness.
Amid the Trump administration’s overhaul of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (D.E.I.), however, TRIO program funding was slashed because words related to the inclusionary policies were mentioned in its grant applications.
Last fall, a group that advocates for TRIO sued the Department for over $40 million in slashed grants.
Last June, Secretary of Education Linda McMahon testified at a Senate budget hearing, saying that TRIO didn’t give her apartment enough oversight.
“I just think that we aren’t able to see the effectiveness across the board that we would normally look to see with our federal spending,” McMahon said at the hearing.
When funding froze, George Washington University paused most of its programing and cut nearly all its staff.
“It was a staff of just me, I was still working with my seniors,” said George Washington’s Upward Bound director, Darrell Thornton.
After growing up in a similar program, Thornton says he wanted to give back.
“I knew I wanted to be that educator that made a difference,” he said.
Earlier this year, a federal judge temporarily blocked the Trump administration’s cuts, restoring funding for the program.
“It kind of felt like I was cut off from my family for a little bit. When we got back, it was like thank God,” Kevin Williams, a junior at Ron Brown Preparatory College High School said.
The university was also able to bring its staff back.
“I’m so relieved to find out this program finally has funding and that this program will continue to support students in the way that it did for me,” Leiva said.
News4 reached out to the Department of Education, but have not heard back.
Washington, D.C
LUCC members tackle housing affordability shortage
County officials representing large urban areas across the country traveled to Washington D.C. April 23 to discuss data-driven approaches to expanding housing supply and affordability at a think tank and relay local housing needs to federal agency staff and members of Congress at NACo’s Large Urban County Caucus (LUCC) fly-in.
“Housing, especially housing supply and affordability, is one of the most pressing challenges facing our respective metropolitan areas,” said LUCC Chair Adrian Garcia, who serves as a Harris County, Texas commissioner. “It’s a core constraint, not only on quality of life, but also on economic growth and workforce ability.”
Best practices
Edward Pinto, senior fellow and co-director of the American Enterprise Institute (AEI) Housing Center, outlined three ways local governments can increase housing supply:
- Allow houses to be built on smaller lots, increasing the amount of starter single family homes and townhomes
- Allow lot split flexibilities on existing lots, enabling a variety of dwelling types and sizes to exist on one property (such as duplexes, ADUs and townhomes)
- Expand flexibility to build homes near jobs
“The three most important things in housing affordability are small lot, small lot, small lot,” Pinto said. “Small lots cost less; you get smaller homes on small lots.”
Local governments should encourage the construction of small residential properties — specifically single-family buildings that contain between one and four separate dwelling units, according to Pinto.
“That is the way that you actually make housing affordable,” he said. “… The first home I bought in 1975 [was] 1,400 square feet, three bedrooms, on a 4,800 square foot lot. We don’t build those houses anymore. They’re illegal. You need to activate that.”
Into the early 20th century, it was common to have multiple types of residences — small, large, duplexes, triplexes, townhomes — mixed in the same neighborhood as doctor’s offices, grocery stores and other commercial properties, Pinto said. And not just in urban areas, but in smaller cities, as well, he noted.
That ended when Herbert Hoover, who was the U.S. Secretary of Commerce at the time, appointed a zoning commission to develop a model zoning statute for the states to pass. That statute was based on a Baltimore city ordinance that led to economic segregation, Pinto noted.
In 1910, Baltimore passed the country’s first racial-zoning ordinance, making it illegal for Black people to live in predominantly white neighborhoods, and vice-versa. In 1917, the U.S. Supreme Court struck down racial zoning, declaring it unconstitutional to refuse to sell a home to someone because of their race, so the city then moved to control how land could be developed and used, requiring lots and homes to be a certain minimum size.
“They came upon economic segregation … That’s why they focused on single-family, detached [homes],” Pinto said. “They now could set lot sizes. They could set side yards, front yards, backyards … and they knew there was lots of research that showed that that would just drive the prices up, out of the reach of the people they didn’t want living there.”
Over a century later, it’s these restrictive zoning ordinances that continue to prevent the expansion of housing supply and affordability, Pinto said. In the United States, 38 million people between the ages of 25 to 65 qualify as low-wage workers, meaning they make less than $40,000 a year working full-time. Low-wage workers usually can’t afford to rent one- or two-bedroom units in high-rise buildings. So, if the goal is to expand affordable housing, those types of developments shouldn’t make up such a large share of new construction, he said.
“Of the 40% of low-wage workers that are in rental households, 60% of them live in single family-1 to 4 — the exact things that were being built in Los Angeles that [the Federal Housing Administration] stamped out back in 1935,” he said.
“And the reason is because you can spread the cost … across more than one wager easily, either you’re married, you have roommates, whatever, you’re able to spread it, but it’s very hard to do that in a one-bedroom apartment.”
If counties do rezone land to maximize housing supply, they need to make the replatting process as simple and inexpensive as possible, so that it’s not dragged out, Pinto said.
“If you’re just taking 8,000 square feet, and you’re dividing it into four, 2,000 square foot lots, that should be drop dead simple,” he said. “If it isn’t drop dead simple, you need to make it drop dead simple.”
Federal housing priorities
In December, the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) finalized its housing target goals through 2028, which outline that a certain percentage of acquisitions that the enterprises make must support low-income households in low-income areas and multi-family housing, according to Leda Bloomfield, associate director of FHFA’s Office of Housing, Community Investment and Inclusion.
“We want to make sure that you’re providing liquidity not just for the class A new construction, but also for starter homes and homes where we think the vast majority of Americans and families are,” Bloomfield said. “Thinking about, how do we achieve the American dream, to get them into those kinds of housing? And making sure that we support the spectrum of borrowers there.”
FHFA announced April 22 that it’s implementing VantageScore 4.0 and FICO 10T for mortgage underwriting, according to Daniel Fichtler, principal readiness adviser for FHFA’s Division of Conservatorship Oversight and Readiness. They are modern, trended-data credit models approved by the FHFA for mortgage underwriting by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and FHA replacing older static models. Both analyze 24-plus months of credit behavior, including rent/utility payments, to better predict risk and expand homeownership opportunities.
“They use what’s called trended credit data, which is more accurate, more reliable,” Fichtler said.
“And they also do things like better account for rent payments — those types of obligations that aren’t always as visible on the credit bureau side, but that can give a better picture of certain borrowers’ credit worthiness.
“We think this is going to be a really important development, because it both improves access and improves safety and soundness.”
The 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act, bipartisan legislation the Senate passed in March, would modernize locally administered housing programs and cut artificial costs from regulatory barriers, according to NACo.
If enacted, it would be a “very important step that’s going to help Americans access quality, affordable housing,” said Geoffrey Smith, general deputy assistant secretary, U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) Office of Congressional and Intergovernmental Relations.
HUD will continue to work with Congress to expand the housing supply, streamline regulations and lower housing costs for all Americans, Smith said. Deregulation is a “top priority” for the department, he noted.
“HUD is taking bold action to help American families with thoughtful proposals to increase housing and opportunity zones, promoting the value of manufactured housing and addressing just the mountain of red tape out there builders are dealing with right now,” Smith said.
Washington, D.C
Correspondents’ dinner attack suspect Cole Allen being held inside D.C. jail complex, source says
Cole Allen, the California man charged in the attack at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner over the weekend, is being detained at the Correctional Treatment Facility at the D.C. jail complex, a law enforcement source confirmed to CBS News. This is the same facility that previously housed many Jan. 6 defendants and is a newer facility than the main jail.
The CTF, operated by the D.C. Department of Corrections, holds men, women and juveniles charged as adults.
Allen, 31, is charged with attempting to assassinate President Trump and two firearms-related offenses stemming from the shooting on Saturday night. He has not yet entered a plea to the charges.
Allen is being held in a restrictive cell in medical isolation, which is standard protocol, the law enforcement source said. Corrections protocol requires that Allen be held under suicide watch for the first 72 hours in a green suicide smock while he is assessed. A lawyer for Allen told the court Thursday that he is being held in a “safe cell” under 24-hour lockdown.
Also, according to the source, a D.C. correctional officer is posted outside Allen’s cell door 24/7 while he is under observation. During this period, he is under strict observation with no access to outside materials. Allen is brought finger foods on a tray and is not allowed utensils, the source said. He’s allowed to shower every 72 hours. Allen is also allowed religious materials in his cell, such as a Bible or Quran. He has not requested any religious materials, according to the source.
The D.C. Department of Corrections says on its website that the facility consists of five separate, multi-story buildings situated immediately adjacent to each other, so the facility presents as one large structure. Housing units within the CTF range from 16 to 48 cells with a maximum capacity of 96 beds per unit. It is a separate structure from D.C.’s main jail.
The U.S. Marshals Service, which manages federal pretrial detainees, has a contract with the D.C. Department of Corrections, the law enforcement source said. The U.S. Marshals Service says on its website that it has contracts with approximately 1,200 state and local governments to rent jail space to house more than 63,000 pretrial detainees.
The U.S. Marshals said it doesn’t release detention locations for high-profile prisoners due to security concerns.
CBS News has reached out to the D.C. Department of Corrections.
Allen has been compliant since his arrival, the law enforcement source said.
During an appearance in federal court Thursday, Allen’s attorneys told the judge that he agreed to remain detained in the lead-up to his trial. A preliminary hearing is set for May 11.
His attorneys had argued in a filing Wednesday that Allen was “gainfully employed” as a tutor, is a “devout Christian” who “dutifully” attends church and is an “active participant” in his religious community. They said he has no criminal history and is college-educated, and that those factors weigh in favor of release.
After telling the judge that Allen instead agreed to remain detained, his attorney, Tezira Abe, asked the judge to order the jail to lift his lockdown restrictions. The judge said she did not have the authority to override the judgment of the jail but would accept briefs on the matter.
Washington, D.C
VIDEO: Boat fire breaks out at James Creek Marina in Southwest DC
WASHINGTON (7News) — D.C. Fire and EMS crews are responding early Thursday morning to a boat fire at James Creek Marina in Southwest D.C.
Around 5 a.m., crews said they were called to the marina in the 2100 block of 2nd Street SW, where one boat was found fully engulfed in flames.
D.C. Fire and EMS crews are responding early Thursday morning, April 30, 2026, to a boat fire at James Creek Marina in Southwest D.C. (DC Fire and EMS)
SEE ALSO | Man airlifted after vehicle crashes into tree in Prince George’s County
Firefighters launched a two-pronged attack, using both land-based units and two fireboats to bring the blaze under control.
D.C. Fire and EMS crews are responding early Thursday morning, April 30, 2026, to a boat fire at James Creek Marina in Southwest D.C. (DC Fire and EMS)
Authorities said the fire also caused damage to neighboring boats on both sides of the vessel.
No injuries were reported.
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The cause of the fire remains under investigation.
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