Highlights

Discover the latest insights and solutions for making Greater DC a place of opportunity for all.

A recent Gallup poll of all 50 states plus the District of Columbia found the DC area to be number one in terms of confidence in the economy, a ranking the district has held since 2009. DC was the only area to score positively on the Gallup Economic Confidence Index; 70 percent of those surveyed in the first half of 2012 believed that the economy was getting better.

Last week, DC’s mayor Vincent Gray kicked off a new Comprehensive Housing Strategy Task Force, mandated by law to update the city’s 2006 housing strategy. Finding an affordable place to rent or buy in DC is clearly a big challenge—not just for poor people but for many working families earning modest incomes.

The Census Bureau’s latest poverty numbers paint a dismal portrait of the lives of millions of Americans. Over 47 million of us are poor. That includes families of four subsisting on $22,314 a year and individuals struggling to survive on $30 a day on average for food, shelter, transportation, and other basics.

Did you read about the senior judge on D.C.’s Superior Court who recently chased down the man who stole his iPhone in a metro station and recovered someone else’s stolen phone? If so, you may have wondered how common such thefts are—or how safe the metro system is.