Washington, D.C
Gaza Protesters Block Roads in Washington as Biden Delivers State of the Union
As President Joe Biden prepared for his pivotal 2024 State of the Union on Thursday, protestors demanding a cease-fire in Gaza blockaded outside the White House and near the Capitol.
The protesters, wearing shirts with the slogan “Biden Legacy = Genocide,” unfurled a large Palestinian flag across Pennsylvania Avenue, and formed a human barricade by sitting in the road to block traffic. The demonstrations were large enough to force Biden’s motorcade to take an alternate route from the White House to the Capitol, CNN reported. The pool traveling with the president said he took “the long way” to the Capitol, avoiding a large group of demonstrators just blocks away from the building. Activists could be heard outside as reporters loaded up into vans to head to the Capitol.
The protests continued as Biden’s delayed speech finally began within the Capitol. The area was practically surrounded by police vehicles and law enforcement officers who declined to speak to Rolling Stone. Despite the outsized police presence, the only protest-related arrest Thursday was that of an unidentified individual who allegedly menaced protesters near the White House by revving his car engine at them. As the protest dispersed near midnight, smaller clusters of demonstrators marched in various directions into the streets surrounding the Capitol, chanting slogans of “Free Palestine,” as they went.
“We forced the president to reroute and arrive late to give his speech to the country,” Jay Saper, an organizer with the group Jewish Voice for Peace, told Rolling Stone. “We know that right now the majority of Americans want a full, permanent, lasting cease-fire […] It’s important for our elected officials to actually answer to the people, as opposed to answering to a [foreign] government that’s actively carrying out genocide by continuing to send and pledge money and weapons to them,” they added.
“We are outraged, we are heartbroken, and we are demanding that President Biden stop funding and arming Israel’s genocide of Palestinians,” Elena Stein of Jewish Voice for Peace, which helped organize the protest, told Rolling Stone.
The Biden administration has expressed concern over Israel’s bombardment of Palestinians in Gaza, but has largely maintained its support for the Israel. The White House announced plans on Thursday for a floating military operation designed to provide aid to Palestinians, but it wasn’t enough to appease activists. “This is a stunt to save his image rather than an actual intent to save lives,” Stein said. “If Biden wanted to save lives, we would not be on Day 150 of Israel dropping U.S.-made bombs on the people of Gaza.”
Biden’s State of the Union address sparked protests not just in Washington, D.C., but across the country, with demonstrators also blocking traffic in Boston and Los Angeles, according to Reuters. “We are here today because enough is enough,” Ahmad Abuznaid, executive director of the U.S. Campaign for Palestinian Rights, told the outlet. “We want to make clear that the State of the Union right now is that of enabling, aiding, and abetting a genocide. Despite the fact that in the U.S. millions of Americans are living without healthcare, millions more are drowning in student debt, libraries are being shut down, budget cuts left and right — and still our government is choosing to use our taxpayer dollars to send weapons to Israel to rain them down on Palestinians,” she added.
The president is on track to be the Democratic nominee in November — but the results in Tuesday’s primaries indicate he has a growing political problem on his left. Biden has received harsh criticism from activist Democrats who are calling for an immediate cease-fire in Gaza. This dissent has appeared in election results as a movement of Democratic voters have been casting ballots for “uncommitted,” as a way to register their disapproval of the president’s refusal to take a stronger stance toward Israel. The uncommitted campaigns “should shake” Biden and his administration, Abuznaid said. “This is not some far off struggle, this is a struggle of the American people as well for what they want their government to represent,” she added.
Since Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack against Israel, in which 1,139 were killed and more than 200 were kidnapped, Israel has laid waste to Gaza with the Biden administration’s support. More than 30,000 Palestinians have been killed, 2 million have been internally displaced, and hundreds of thousands are at imminent risk of famine, according to the United Nations.
Washington, D.C
Van drove through barricade outside White House; driver apprehended: officials
WASHINGTON, D.C. – A Secret Service investigation is underway near the White House after officials say a van drove through a barricade early Wednesday morning.
What we know:
The Metropolitan police and Secret Service responded to the vicinity of the White House around 6:30 a.m. after a van drove through a barricade at Connecticut Avenue and H Street.
The driver of the van was apprehended and is being questioned, according to police. No injuries have been reported.
As a result of the investigation, multiple streets in the immediate area have been closed to traffic, including 15th Street and E Street Northwest and H Street Northwest between 15th and 17th Streets.
What you can do:
Drivers are advised to avoid the area and seek alternate routes. Commuters traveling through downtown Washington should expect delays.
What we don’t know:
Officials have yet to release further details. This is a developing story. Check back for updates,
The Source: Information from this article was provided by the Metropolitan police.
Washington, D.C
Lime updates subscription service for frequent riders in DC – WTOP News
Lime, the company behind those bright green scooters and bikes you may often see zooming around D.C. or lying on the sidewalk, is updating its monthly subscription service, aimed at making rides more affordable for its frequent users.
Lime, the company behind those bright green scooters and bikes you may often see zooming around D.C. or lying on the sidewalk, is updating its monthly subscription service, aimed at making rides more affordable for its frequent users.
In a news release Tuesday, Lime said its monthly subscription that starts at $5.99/month for D.C. riders will also introduce flat-rate pricing of $2.50 for rides up to 20 minutes and $1.25 for rides under five minutes.
Every ride will be subject to a flat rate, instead of a per-minute cost. Subscribed members also get unlimited free unlocking and discounted flat-rate pricing for trips under five minutes.
Devin Rote, the global integrated marketing lead at Lime, told WTOP the goal with the update is “to make the choice to utilize micro-mobility and more sustainable travel options easier for users across the D.C. region.”
Rote said as we enter the spring season, Lime sees an increase in trips as the city also sees a rise in tourism.
“Especially through cherry blossom season, Nationals baseball season, and everything that a great, warm weather season brings here in the D.C. region. For us, really, this is the start of busy season,” he said.
There are over 7,000 of the dockless e-bikes and scooters around D.C. They go up to 18 mph — down from 20 mph in November — and users must be at least 18 to ride.
WTOP’s John Wordock contributed to this report.
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Washington, D.C
A Virginia boater is suing a DC utility for the Potomac River sewage spill
A Virginia boater is suing a Washington water utility for negligence in the collapse of a pipe that leaked millions of gallons of raw sewage into the Potomac River.
The class action lawsuit filed Friday in U.S. District Court in Greenbelt, Maryland, comes weeks after a January sewage pipe collapse, shooting wastewater out of the ground and into the river in an area just north of Washington, D.C. The spill is seen as a serious environmental blight and became the focus of political bickering between President Donald Trump and Democratic-led Maryland, where the leak occurred.
Dr. Nicholas Lailas, M.D., the plaintiff, is a Virginia resident and recreational boat user on the Potomac who is seeking compensation for people “whose property interests in and use and enjoyment of the Potomac River … have been impaired by Defendant’s conduct.”
The lawsuit alleges that it was DC Water’s responsibility as the owner and operator of the ruptured pipe, known as the Potomac Interceptor, to maintain it in a “reasonably safe condition and to prevent foreseeable harm to persons and property.”
The lawsuit said that preliminary data indicate that there are thousands of people who own property or vessels in the affected parts of the Potomac.
Andrew Levetown, an attorney for the plaintiff, said in an interview Monday that it will take time to get the full breadth of the class, with business owners, property owners and recreational users all having interest in the potential damages caused by the Jan. 19 collapse and leak.
“You’re going to have businesses who lose business because instead of sitting next to the Potomac, their clients are sitting next to the open sewer,” he said.
The suit did not specify a damage amount. DC Water spokesperson John Lisle said in a statement that the collapse of the Potomac Interceptor was “a serious and unexpected event, and our teams remain focused on the response, environmental protection, and restoration efforts. Because this matter is currently subject to ongoing litigation, it would not be appropriate for us to comment further at this time.”
D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser declared an emergency Feb. 18 and requested that President Donald Trump provide federal resources to help the city fight the leak that dumped 250 million gallons of raw sewage into the Potomac River in its early stages. The president approved the emergency assistance days later to help the city address the emergency.
DC Water gave its most detailed assessment yet of why the Potomac River sewage spill occurred and what it will take to fix it. News4’s Mark Segraves reports.
DC Water said it knew the pipe, first installed in the 1960s, was deteriorating, and rehabilitation work on a section about a quarter-mile (400 meters) from the break began in September and was recently completed. The pipe that ruptured was scheduled for repair this summer.
DC Water’s updates say the emergency repairs are beyond the halfway point and there are no flows into the river.
At a public briefing last week, officials with the utility said they were assessing the cause of the rupture, including whether the way the pipeline was initially constructed contributed to the emergency. David Gadis, the CEO of DC Water, said at that briefing that while it was too early to say definitively, “we are seeing indication that this incident may have been highly unusual.”
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