Vol. 55, No. 13 • January 9 - 15, 2020
New Opportunities for Ethiopia-D.C. Relations / Page 26
Jack Evans Resigns from D.C. Council
5 Councilmember Jack Evans (WI File photo)
By Sam P.K. Collins WI Contributing Writer @SamPKCollins 5 Anti-war demonstrators gathered at the White House on Saturday, January 4 to protest the potential war against Iran set off with the Trump administration’s use of a drone strike to kill Iranian commander Qassem Soleimani. (Anthony Tilghman/The Washington Informer)
Parents Demand Answers on Lead at School Playgrounds By Sam P.K. Collins WI Contributing Writer @SamPKCollins
5 The D.C. Department of General Services will review the lead levels on the playground at Parkview Recreation Center. (Roy Lewis/The Washington Informer)
Officials in the Department of General Services (DGS) said they will release an update about lead levels on D.C. public school playgrounds within the coming months. They revealed this timeline amid demands from parents, community members and the D.C. Council for a solution to a citywide problem. Aspects of this dilemma of particular concern to Jael Nicole Anker-Lagos and other members of the Bruce-Monroe Park View community involve the presence of lead and other contaminants on the grounds of D.C.’s recreation centers, and the department’s level of transpar-
ency about the use of hazardous material in place of the rubber implicated in earlier reports. “Our children are being exposed to lead and now another toxic material. Why would they spend money on this project without community input?” Anker-Lagos, a mother of three students at Bruce-Monroe Elementary School at Park View in Northwest, said in reference to the plastic wrapped silica filling she said DGS contractors plan to install at the Park View Recreation Center. Since last spring, when DGS deemed the Park View soccer field unfit for use, Anker-Lagos’ young ones and other Bruce-Monroe kindergarteners have continued to spend their recess at the
LEAD Page 40
Effective Friday, January 17, Jack Evans, the longest-serving elected official in the District’s history, will no longer represent the residents of Ward 2.
EVANS Page 33
Shopping in 2020: Should Blacks Celebrate Nation’s So-called ‘Retail Apocalypse?’
Major Store Closures Hit Region as Online Purchasing Continues to Dominate By Lindiwe Vilakazi WI Contributing Writer The world of shopping has drastically changed over the past decade and many marketing experts and economists predict that 2020 will bring more of the same. Consumers can anticipate the ongoing “death march” of some of their favorite retailers across the U.S. as they either reduce the number of stores, consider liq-
uidation or close their doors for good. However, consumers continue to grow more comfortable with and accustomed to online shopping platforms as this more modern method of shopping yields greater profits for businesses. According to recently-released data from Coresight Research, retailers including
RETAILERS Page 14
Celebrating 55 Years of Service / Serving More Than 50,000 Readers Throughout The Metropolitan Area