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Deborah Simmons

dsimmons@washingtontimes.com

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

Deborah Simmons

Dollars and sense of HUD’s safety net

Two weeks ago, President Trump signed a piece of paper that gave his agency directors simple marching orders: Conduct a top-to-bottom review of safety net programs and policies. The goal is simple as well: Find ways to push more people off of welfare and into the workforce.

April 26, 2018
This Tuesday, March 14, 2017, photo shows the Starbucks logo on a shop in downtown Pittsburgh. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar, File)

Starbucks and its drive-thru future

Starbucks has a latte work to do to catch up with the competition when it comes to getting its drive-thru customers back on the road quickly.

April 24, 2018
Deborah Simmons

Uber tax increases for Metro

The District is considering Uber tax increases, which means you're going to have to pony up more for the privilege of using a ridesharing service. Much of the extra revenue will be diverted to Metro -- the D.C. region's transit service -- because authorities in D.C., Maryland and Virginia cannot imagine life without Metro.

April 23, 2018
Deborah Simmons

Sex, crimes and videotapes

Is OK for a child to be prostituted because his parents' failed to pay the "coyotes" who "escorted" him into the United States across the border with Mexico?

April 9, 2018
Deborah Simmons

Dreamers, dreams 50 years after MLK assassination

April 4 marks the 50th anniversary of the death of Martin Luther King in Memphis, Tennessee, where an assassination's single high-velocity shot pierced the right side of his face.

April 2, 2018
Deborah Simmons

Free preschool for many means free child care

The underpinnings of the universal pre-K movement appeared noble: Provide youngsters with basic academic and social skills and by kindergarten those kids would be on solid footing for grade school and beyond.

March 29, 2018
Deborah Simmons

Brewing off the shores of the Chesapeake Bay

The Pamunkey Tribe is staking a claim but not in Maryland's Charles County, where the family of the first mayor of D.C. — Robert Brent — put down stakes before the Revolutionary War in what is now the town of Pomonkey and its environs.

March 19, 2018
Deborah Simmons

Martin Luther King, guns, gun control

The eyes and ears of J. Edgar Hoover's FBI weren't in Parkland, Florida, on Valentine's Day or trawling the internet for menacing words by accused killer Nikolas Cruz.

March 14, 2018
Deborah Simmons

National School Walkout smackdown

Across the nation, kids are scheduled to walk out of school on Wednesday to honor the 17 victims killed in the massacre at Marjory Stoneman Douglas on Feb. 14 in Parkland, Florida.

March 12, 2018
Deborah Simmons

Washington, D.C.’s education con game

American education is a con game, too, only the hustle isn't to lure marks with playing cards and nutshells. No, in the Ed-Con Game, the shills are children, parents and voters -- everyday, ordinary American citizens who expect politicians to say what they mean and mean what they say.

March 8, 2018
Deborah Simmons

Paging Mayor Muriel Bowser

Madame Mayor, as a Christian woman, you're probably quite aware that John 8:32 offers powerful advice for people, including those running so fast they're likely to meet themselves turning the corner. Well, the race for your re-election began four years ago, and now you must pause.

March 5, 2018