No - in person instruction is the exception for most middle schoolers or high school students.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a reason the schools need to open. Teens have been neglected by the city for the last year. We can open bars - but can't figure out how to open schools. These kids need to supports that are provided by the structure of the school system.
Aren't schools open in DC?
Anonymous wrote:I think we need to change sentencing laws in D.C. I'm for leniency but 5 years in prison for murder is a spit in the face for the dead victim's family.
Enough is enough. If these teens are going to be reckless enough to deliberately endanger someone's life and kill them, they should be getting 25 years in actual prison (transition them at age 21).
- a DC resident
Anonymous wrote:This is a reason the schools need to open. Teens have been neglected by the city for the last year. We can open bars - but can't figure out how to open schools. These kids need to supports that are provided by the structure of the school system.
Anonymous wrote:This is a reason the schools need to open. Teens have been neglected by the city for the last year. We can open bars - but can't figure out how to open schools. These kids need to supports that are provided by the structure of the school system.
According to police, a red Nissan Altima was traveling westbound on C Street, Northeast, around 1:30 a.m. Sunday when it sped through a red light.
The Nissan, which police say appears to have been operated by juveniles, collided with a silver Toyota Camry operated by Brian Johnson, 30, who was a resident of D.C., said police
D.C. Police added that one of the cars then crashed into a local resident’s front yard before catching fire.
Johnson eventually passed away at a hospital after the crash, D.C. Police said.