Washington, D.C
The border is not broken, Washington, D.C. is: Marisa Limón Garza
Let’s be clear. The border is not broken. 1.5 million workers, families, and children cross the southern border every day to shop, to work, to go to school, and we think nothing of it. In fact our prosperity and our wellbeing as a country depends on it. The idea that 5,000 or even 10,000 people might overwhelm us trivializes both what our government is capable of and our nation’s capacity to welcome. Those of us living at the border know this.
It is clear that what is broken is in Washington D.C., where administration officials and members of Congress are detached not only from reality on the ground, but are detached from the vision and courage necessary to put in place real solutions.
It is enraging to see President Joe Biden break his promises time after time to restore a humane and orderly asylum and immigration system, and instead retreat to embrace tired, failed, enforcement-first approaches to immigration. Policies excluding people or curtailing access to due process and legal pathways are documented failures. Every month Title 42 was in effect, more people crossed the southern border without authorization than the month before; it was not a deterrent then and imitations will not be a deterrent in the future. Texas has strewn miles of razor wire and sent thousands of police to the border, and yet migrants still cross in places like Eagle Pass, undeterred by our governor’s xenophobic preening and white supremacist posturing.
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One’s commitment to their children is a powerful force that drives parents and children to seek a better life in the U.S. No wall we might build will ever be stronger than this force of love and hope. Here in the Borderland we believe in supporting families, and keeping them together, not turning our backs on them or tearing them apart. And day in and day out we stand ready to do the work of welcome − the only thing that actually works.
We call on Congress and the Biden administration to reverse course and turn away from the political games that drive us toward these reckless immigration proposals. We must have common-sense immigration laws that strengthen our country by bolstering legal pathways, respecting people’s rights, and honoring shared values.
Marisa Limón Garza is the executive director of Las Americas Immigrant Advocacy Center.
Washington, D.C
What’s happening this weekend in DC, Virginia, Maryland: Nov. 14-16
WASHINGTON (7News) — The federal shutdown is over, the holidays are approaching and the DMV is packed with things to do. Here’s what’s going on this weekend.
Washington, D.C.
Friday, November 14
Side Yards Carnival (5:30 p.m.), 355 Water Street SE
Friday Night Fever Comedy Show (8 p.m.), 2323 18th Street NW
Saturday, November 15
Taylor Swift Dance Class (11 a.m.), 600 Howard Road SE
NWSL Semifinal: Washington Spirit vs Portland Thorns (12 p.m.), 100 Potomac Avenue SW
On Air: The Frequency of Her Power (7 p.m.), 2455 6th Street NW
Club Oz at Barrel House (10 p.m.), 1341 14th Street NW
Sunday, November 16
Pizza and Coffee Rave (11 a.m.), 399 Morse Street NE
Samantha Bee: How to Survive Menopause (4 p.m.), 600 I Street NW
Maryland
Friday, November 14
Strathmore Shop Holiday Market (10 a.m.), 10701 Rockville Pike, North Bethesda
Disney Channel Skate (9:30 p.m.), 5211 Campus Drive, College Park
Saturday, November 15
Holiday Arts and Crafts Market (10 a.m.), 14900 Health Center Drive, Bowie
Dinosaur Park Open House (12 p.m.), 13100 Mid Atlantic Boulevard, Laurel
Diwali Festival (3 p.m.), 12901 Town Commons Drive, Germantown
Sunday, November 16
Empty Bowls (1 p.m.), 155 Gibbs Street, Rockville
The Polar Express on the Potomac (2 p.m.), 150 National Plaza, National Harbor
Virginia
Friday, November 14
Bull Run Festival of Lights (5:30 p.m.), 7700 Bull Run Drive, Centreville
Tysons Holiday Kick-off (6 p.m.), 1961 Chain Bridge Road, Tysons Corner
Saturday, November 15
Chocolate and Coffee Festival (10 a.m.), 4320 Chantilly Shopping Center, Chantilly
Leesburg Tree Lighting Festival (2 p.m.), 1610 Village Market Boulevard SE, Leesburg
Sunday, November 16
American Patchwork Quartet (3 p.m.), 2310 Colts Neck Road, Reston
JMU Unaccompanied (5:30), 227 Maple Avenue East, Vienna
Washington, D.C
As part of safety push, motor assist on DC e-bikes is slowing down – WTOP News
In response to community concerns and police observations, the motor assist feature on Lime and Veo e-bikes in D.C. is slowing down. The city’s thousands of undocked e-bikes will have a limit on how fast they can go.
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As part of safety push, motor assist on DC e-bikes is slowing down
In response to community concerns and police observations, the motor assist feature on Lime and Veo e-bikes in D.C. is slowing down.
The city’s thousands of undocked e-bikes will have a limit on how fast they can go. Now, the boost feature on Lime e-bikes won’t be able to go faster than 18 miles per hour, the company said in a statement. The assistance on Veo e-bikes will be capped at 15 miles per hour.
The previous limit for both companies’ e-bikes was 20 miles per hour, a D.C. Department of Transportation spokesman said.
City leaders have been considering asking the companies to make a change since the spring, the DDOT spokesman said. They recently asked, and the companies agreed.
The switch comes in response to growing complaints about e-bike riders zipping by pedestrians on city sidewalks, which is not illegal in D.C. In some cases, e-bikes are being used by suspects in crimes to quickly get away.
“I read a lot of police reports, so I know there’s some use, or I should say misuse, of the bikes,” Mayor Muriel Bowser said Wednesday at an unrelated event. “We want to make sure that all the bicycles can be available for the purpose that they are intended, and curb any misuse.”
Meanwhile, a D.C. police spokesman said Lime e-bikes and scooters are being used by juveniles who are suspects in robberies and assaults. However, the agency doesn’t have data on how common that circumstance is.
“Anecdotally, we have some concerns about some of the shared transportation equipment being used to commit crimes,” Bowser said.
While Capital Bikeshare, or CaBi, e-bikes have a pedal assist feature, the DDOT spokesman said data shows the maximum boost is 17 miles per hour.
In busy corridors, D.C. has put in place an 8 mile per hour boost limit. That’s in effect on U Street, in Chinatown and Navy Yard and at the Wharf, DDOT said.
“We’re all trying to, in tandem with MPD, promote good behavior on our shared fleet devices,” said Sharon Kershbaum, DDOT’s director.
Jacob Tugendrajch, a Lime spokesman, said in a statement the company has “worked with the city to find what we hope will be an appropriate balance on speed limits and slow zones as have all micromobility operators in D.C. this year.”
Veo implemented the 15 mile per hour speed limit and is “working closely with the District to meet local transportation priorities and ensure our service remains a dependable option for residents traveling to work, connecting to transit, and visiting local businesses,” a spokeswoman said in a statement.
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Washington, D.C
Teenager shot and killed in Southeast DC, possibly for his jacket
Tristan Johnson, 17, was a young man with plans — and the energy and determination to make them come true — says his godfather, Davian Morgan.
“When I’d talk to him about future plans, he’d be like, ‘Well, you know, starting a vending machine business or like owning my own trucking company,’” said Davian Morgan, Tristan’s godfather.
Pictures from Tristan’s life — his years at Ingenuity Prep in the District, then at Dr. Henry A. Wise High School in Prince George’s County — fill Morgan’s phone.
“He was very outgoing,” Morgan said. “So even if you didn’t know him, you knew of him, and he was eventually going to find his way to introduce you to himself.
Family members know Tristan was with some friends around 3 p.m. Saturday when he was shot and killed in the 1900 block of C Street SE, not far from the Stadium Armory Metro Station.
D.C. police sources familiar with the investigation say the suspects may have been attempting to rob the 17-year-old of his jacket.
As his family grieves the sudden, horrifying loss, they are finding some comfort from the outpouring of love from his many friends.
“At least 20 of my previous students found my number some way, somehow and they were like, ‘Are you okay? We’re just checking in to see if you’re okay. We’re praying for you,’” Morgan said. “And in my mind, I should be saying this to you
In his grief, Morgan says he has wondered about those thousands of federal officers and National Guard troops deployed to fight crime in the District.
“I think that is probably one of the questions right now that his mother is asking herself over and over and over again,” Morgan said. “Of all the places for it to happen, in broad daylight.”
Tristan was fatally shot just one block from the D.C. Armory, a hub of operations for the estimated two thousand National Guard troops deployed to the nation’s capital to fight crime.
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