D.C. restaurant, retail employees face bleak future if remote office work stays prevalent
Paul Duggan, The Washington Post
Feb. 16, 2021
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A worker crosses heads to his office in downtown Washington, which has become a ghost town during the pandemic.Washington Post photo by Sarah L. Voisin
After a year of pandemic-induced upheaval, as employees and bosses wonder about lasting changes to work life, a consultant s report predicts that when the coronavirus crisis is over, a huge number of people in the Washington region will continue doing their jobs remotely, causing significant pain in some parts of the economy. The effects of a moderate to substantial shift to remote work in the Capital Region will not be felt evenly across geography, industry or occupation, according to the study, released Tuesday by the Greater Washington Partnership, a business alliance.
The Pizzagate gunman is out of prison. Conspiracy theories are out of control.
Michael E. Miller, The Washington Post
Feb. 16, 2021
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The Comet neon sign adorns the Comet Ping Pong restaurant in Northwest Washington.Washington Post photo by Michael S. Williamson.
SALISBURY, N.C. - He slipped out of bed before sunrise and started driving, spurred by the conspiracy theory he would soon help make famous. As he sped the 350 miles from his hometown in North Carolina to the nation s capital, Edgar Maddison Welch tilted his cellphone camera toward himself and pressed record. I can t let you grow up in a world that s so corrupt by evil, he told the two young daughters he had left sleeping back in Salisbury, without at least standing up for you and for other children just like you.
Il lavoro delle donne e dei minori nella Costituzione – Il paese delle donne on line – rivista womenews.net - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from womenews.net Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Mass vaccination clinic opened with fanfare, closed amid rifts of trust
Frances Stead Sellers, The Washington Post
Feb. 14, 2021
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1of6People wait in an observation area after receiving a coronavirus vaccine at the mass-vaccination site set up by Philly Fighting COVID at the Pennsylvania Convention Center on Jan. 15, 2021.Photo for The Washington Post by Rachel WisniewskiShow MoreShow Less
2of6Andrei Doroshin poses for a photo at his Philadelphia apartment in January 2021.Photo for The Washington Post by Rachel WisniewskiShow MoreShow Less
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4of6Dominic Osipowicz, Philly Fighting COVID s chief of medical operations, teaches volunteers how to administer a coronavirus vaccine in Philadelphia in January 2021.Photo for The Washington Post by Rachel WisniewskiShow MoreShow Less