B8 EZ RE THE WASHINGTON POST.TUESDAY, MAY 24 , 2022
AVERAGE RECORD ACTUAL FORECAST
PREVIOUS YEAR NORMAL LATEST
<–10–0s 0s 10s20s 30s 40s50s 60s 70s80s 90s 100s 110+
T-storms Rain Showers Snow Flurries Ice Cold Front Warm FrontStationary Front
NATIONAL Today Tomorrow
High
Low
Normal
Record high
Record low
Reagan Dulles BWI
Reagan Dulles BWI
Today’s tides (High tides in Bold )
WORLD Today Tomorrow
Sources: AccuWeather.com ; US Army Centralized
Allergen Extract Lab (pollen data); airnow.gov (air
quality data); National Weather Service
* AccuWeather's RealFeel Temperature®
combines over a dozen factors for an accurate
measure of how the conditions really “feel.”
Key: s -sunny, pc -partly cloudy, c -cloudy, r -rain,
sh - showers, t -thunderstorms, sf -snow flurries,
sn -snow, i -ice
Moon Phases Solar system
NATION
OFFICIAL RECORD
Rise Set
REGION
Past 24 hours
Total this month
Normal
Total this year
Normal
Richmond
Norfolk
Ocean City
Annapolis
Dover
Cape May
Baltimore
Charlottesville
Lexington
Washington
Virginia Beach
Kitty Hawk
Harrisburg Philadelphia
Hagerstown
Davis
OCEAN:
OCEAN:
OCEAN:
OCEAN:
Temperatures
Precipitation
for the 48 contiguous states excludes Antarctica
Yesterday's National
75° 2:00 p.m.
63° 6:00 a.m.
78 °/60°
97 ° 1925
45° 1961
72° 1:10 p.m.
60° 6:00 a.m.
77°/55°
92° 2021
39° 2002
75° 2:00 p.m.
62° 4:06 a.m.
77°/55°
98° 1925
39° 1961
Washington 4:05 a.m. 11:01 a.m. 4:27 p.m. 11:23 p.m.
Annapolis 1:30 a.m. 7:27 a.m. 1:33 p.m. 7:50 p.m.
Ocean City 3:28 a.m. 9:53 a.m. 4:08 p.m. 10:18 p.m.
Norfolk 5:36 a.m. 11:49 a.m. 6:14 p.m. none
Point Lookout 3:41 a.m. 9:31 a.m. 4:05 p.m. 10:13 p.m.
64
°
57 ° 66
°
59 ° 71
°
68 ° 76
°
65 ° 77
°
65 ° 83
°
67 °
Sun 5:49 a.m. 8:21 p.m.
Moon 3:03 a.m. 2:45 p.m.
Venus 4:07 a.m. 5:05 p.m.
Mars 3:04 a.m. 2:59 p.m.
Jupiter 3:08 a.m. 3:13 p.m.
Saturn 1:35 a.m. 12:07 p.m.
May 30
New
June 7
First
Quarter
June 14
Full
June 20
Last
Quarter
1.50"
5.69"
2.92"
18.29"
15.11"
1.40"
5.60"
3.48"
15.97"
16.00"
0.91"
4.84"
2.82"
18.47"
16.20"
Blue Ridge: Today, morning rain, then a shower or two;
cool in central parts. High 53 to 57. Winds east–northeast
6–12 mph. Tonight, occasional rain, drizzle in central parts.
Low 46 to 51. Winds northeast 6–12 mph. Wednesday,
cloudy. High 57 to 61.
Atlantic beaches: Today, periods of rain; winds gradually
subsiding. High 61 to 67. Winds east–northeast 10–20 mph.
Tonight, heavy showers in the south; a little rain in central
parts. Partly cloudy in the north. Low 56 to 62. Winds east–
northeast 10–20 mph.
Pollen: High
Grass High
Tr ees High
Weeds Low
Mold High
UV: Moderate
3 out of 11+
Air Quality: Good
Dominant cause: Ozone
63/ 57
67/62
61/ 59
63/ 59
64/55
62/ 58
65/ 56
62/5 4
66/55
69/65
72/65
68/5 4 70/56
64/54
59/48 64/57
63°
60°
71 °
60°
Waterways: Upper Potomac River : Today, occasional rain, drizzle.
Wind northeast 7–14 knots. Waves 2 feet or less. • Lower Potomac
and Chesapeake Bay : Today, rain. Wind east 8–16 knots. Waves 1–2
feet on the Lower Potomac; 1–3 feet on the Chesapeake Bay.• River
Stages : The stage at Little Falls will be around 4.10 feet today, with
no change of 4.10 Wednesday. Flood stage at Little Falls is 10 feet.
Albany, NY 73/53/pc 75/54/pc
Albuquerque 72/46/s 79/55/pc
Anchorage 56/44/c 57/46/pc
Atlanta 82/67/t 82/68/t
Austin 79/67/t 73/58/r
Baltimore 65/56/r 70/58/c
Billings, MT 67/45/c 75/49/pc
Birmingham 81/69/t 84/68/t
Bismarck, ND 67/45/c 71/49/pc
Boise 72/52/s 84/58/s
Boston 61/50/pc 66/53/pc
Buffalo 69/53/pc 73/62/c
Burlington, VT 71/50/pc 75/58/pc
Charleston, SC 86/71/t 85/72/pc
Charleston, WV 74/55/c 82/60/c
Charlotte 76/60/c 75/63/c
Cheyenne, WY 53/35/sh 67/43/pc
Chicago 65/55/pc 73/65/t
Cincinnati 75/62/pc 81/65/t
Cleveland 67/56/pc 77/66/c
Dallas 77/63/t 74/57/pc
Denver 52/38/r 70/47/pc
Des Moines 59/51/r 63/50/r
Detroit 70/55/pc 74/67/t
El Paso 89/57/s 89/61/s
Fairbanks, AK 64/45/pc 69/49/s
Fargo, ND 68/48/c 62/42/pc
Hartford, CT 73/49/pc 75/51/pc
Honolulu 84/71/s 83/72/s
Houston 84/74/t 75/62/t
Indianapolis 74/62/pc 80/65/t
Jackson, MS 84/71/t 81/64/t
Jacksonville, FL 89/68/t 86/69/pc
Kansas City, MO 62/60/r 68/54/r
Las Vegas 93/72/s 98/75/s
Little Rock 78/67/r 74/59/t
Los Angeles 79/58/pc 79/59/pc
Louisville 78/66/pc 85/69/t
Memphis 83/71/r 80/63/t
Miami 88/78/s 88/79/pc
Milwaukee 61/52/pc 68/61/sh
Minneapolis 68/51/c 53/47/r
Nashville 83/68/pc 85/67/t
New Orleans 88/78/t 86/72/t
New York City 69/55/pc 68/57/c
Norfolk 67/62/r 68/65/c
Oklahoma City 68/54/r 63/52/c
Omaha 57/51/r 57/47/r
Orlando 91/72/pc 89/72/pc
Philadelphia 70/56/c 73/58/c
Phoenix 99/75/s 102/76/pc
Pittsburgh 69/53/c 76/60/pc
Portland, ME 61/45/pc 64/49/pc
Portland, OR 66/57/c 76/55/pc
Providence, RI 68/46/pc 68/50/pc
Raleigh, NC 74/59/sh 70/61/c
Reno, NV 84/53/s 90/58/pc
Richmond 63/57/r 66/59/sh
Sacramento 99/62/s 98/58/s
St. Louis 74/67/c 79/62/t
St. Thomas, VI 84/76/pc 85/76/sh
Salt Lake City 71/49/s 79/60/s
San Diego 67/59/pc 67/59/pc
San Francisco 75/55/s 75/55/s
San Juan, PR 86/75/sh 85/75/sh
Seattle 61/52/c 68/51/pc
Spokane, WA 63/49/pc 68/48/c
Syracuse 72/54/pc 75/56/c
Tampa 93/76/pc 92/77/pc
Wichita 63/54/r 60/51/c
Addis Ababa 84/54/c 84/54/c
Amsterdam 61/50/t 63/55/c
Athens 84/66/s 85/67/s
Auckland 63/57/pc 65/52/pc
Baghdad 95/69/pc 99/70/pc
Bangkok 89/79/t 91/80/sh
Beijing 92/63/pc 86/60/s
Berlin 73/52/t 71/54/c
Bogota 65/51/r 65/50/c
Brussels 62/47/t 66/53/c
Buenos Aires 67/56/pc 59/45/sh
Cairo 92/69/s 92/68/s
Caracas 73/64/t 73/64/t
Copenhagen 64/51/sh 62/52/sh
Dakar 79/72/s 80/72/s
Dublin 61/48/sh 62/49/sh
Edinburgh 60/47/t 60/46/sh
Frankfurt 70/49/c 73/52/pc
Geneva 63/52/t 71/51/c
Ham., Bermuda 79/74/pc 80/72/c
Helsinki 69/46/c 69/49/c
Ho Chi Minh City 90/79/t 90/79/t
Hong Kong 83/78/c 83/78/c
Islamabad 88/69/s 94/73/s
Istanbul 75/61/s 78/62/s
Jerusalem 78/58/s 81/60/s
Johannesburg 66/44/s 69/44/s
Kabul 76/59/s 84/62/s
Kingston, Jam. 85/78/c 86/77/t
Kolkata 95/80/t 93/82/s
Kyiv 68/48/c 74/57/c
Lagos 86/73/t 84/73/t
Lima 67/60/pc 66/59/pc
Lisbon 68/56/pc 77/62/pc
London 63/49/t 64/51/sh
Madrid 70/48/c 70/50/s
Manila 94/82/t 96/81/t
Mexico City 78/54/t 79/58/t
Montreal 67/48/c 75/56/pc
Moscow 48/37/c 55/43/pc
Mumbai 91/82/pc 91/82/pc
Nairobi 80/59/pc 79/59/pc
New Delhi 90/77/t 94/80/pc
Oslo 61/49/r 57/47/sh
Ottawa 67/45/c 72/56/c
Paris 65/49/sh 69/54/pc
Prague 70/54/c 68/51/t
Rio de Janeiro 78/67/s 79/67/s
Riyadh 104/79/pc 106/81/s
Rome 79/62/s 82/62/pc
San Salvador 79/68/r 79/69/r
Santiago 65/42/c 66/42/pc
Sarajevo 82/53/pc 83/54/pc
Seoul 81/57/s 79/55/c
Shanghai 70/65/c 81/66/r
Singapore 90/78/t 88/78/t
Stockholm 65/49/sh 65/45/sh
Sydney 65/54/sh 65/54/sh
Taipei City 81/72/t 76/71/r
Tehran 83/66/s 83/64/s
Tokyo 76/65/pc 77/66/pc
Toronto 65/51/pc 68/58/pc
Vienna 72/58/t 70/54/t
Warsaw 71/57/r 65/51/r
Today
Rain
Wednesday
Cloudy
Thursday
Mostly cloudy,
humid
Friday
T-storm
Saturday
Partly sunny
Sunday
Partly sunny
Th F Sa Su M Tu W Th F Sa Su M Tu W Th
Statistics through 5 p.m. Monday
Difference from 30–yr. avg. (Reagan): this month: +0.4° yr. to date: +0.3°
High: Needles, CA 95°
Low: Lake Yellowstone, WY 20°
World
High: Nawabshah, Pakistan 118°
Low: Dewar Lakes, Canada –1°
Weather map features for noon today.
WIND: E 7–14 mph
HUMIDITY: Moderate
CHNCE PRECIP: 90%
FEELS*: 64°
W:
H:
P:
FEELS: 66°
ENE 7–14 mph
Moderate
25%
W:
H:
P:
FEELS: 72°
SSE 6–12 mph
High
20%
W:
H:
P:
FEELS: 77°
SSW 8–16 mph
High
90%
W:
H:
P:
FEELS: 82°
WSW 6–12 mph
High
25%
W:
H:
P:
FEELS: 88°
SSW 6–12 mph
High
20%
Mostly cloudy and damp
The heaviest rain is likely to occur
early in the day and favor areas from
the city south. North, it might be
mainly done after sunrise. Afternoon
activity should be lighter and
generally waning. When it’s done, about an inch
or more will probably have fallen across southern
parts of the area. With plenty of rain and clouds
around, temperatures will rise only to the mid-
60s for highs. Winds will be out of the northeast
about 10 mph, with gusts past 20 mph.
The Weather
WASHINGTONPOST.COM/WEATHER. TWITTER: @CAPITALWEATHER. FACEBOOK.COM/CAPITALWEATHER
BY JULIE ZAUZMER WEIL
Outgoing D.C. Council mem-
ber Mary M. Cheh announced
her pick Monday in the crowded
race to replace her: Tricia Dun-
can, a community volunteer who
is one of nine candidates vying to
fill the Ward 3 council seat that
Cheh has held for 15 years.
“ Only Tricia has the personal
qualities that will make her an
excellent Council Member,” Cheh
wrote in a statement. “Ask your-
self, as issues arise over the next
four years, who is most likely to
exercise the best judgment and
represent your values. I will an-
swer that question by voting for
Tricia Duncan.”
After Cheh’s statement, Ruth
Wattenberg, the ward’s school
board representative, tweeted
that as the other elected official
who represents Ward 3, she
would be supporting education
activist Matthew Frumin. She
cast Frumin as the most electable
of several candidates advocating
for priorities like increasing den-
sity, affordable housing, diversity
and bike lanes: “Among those
who share his views, he has the
clearest path to victory!” Watten-
berg tweeted, with a photo of
herself with a Frumin yard sign.
Duncan, a stay-at-home moth-
er of two teenagers who formerly
worked in real estate, has been
involved in Ward 3 as a leader of
her sons’ school’s parent-teacher
organization and as president of
the Palisades Community Associ-
ation, which holds neighborhood
events. She has advocated for the
council to build new schools in
Ward 3 and is running on a
platform that includes increas-
ing the frequency and reliability
of bus routes and adding more
members to the 13-person D.C.
Council.
Cheh had said she would not
make an endorsement in the race
to fill her seat, and in an inter-
view Monday said she didn’t view
her statement of support as a
formal endorsement.
“I can’t go anywhere in the
ward without people asking me
[who I’m voting for] and I have to
answer something,” Cheh said in
an interview. “I finally figured,
look, I’m just going to put out this
statement.... I ’m just telling
people who I’m voting for, be-
cause they keep asking me.”
She said she won’t campaign
for Duncan like she did for
Christina Henderson (I-At
Large), whom she endorsed in
2020.
Cheh said her choice of Dun-
can was based more on personal-
ity than policy. “It’s more how
you engage with people, whether
you’re open, you have enough
humility to think that you don’t
have all the answers and you will
ask others what they think,” she
said Monday.
Cheh praised Duncan as “not
ideological.” Some of Duncan’s
stances seem to try to chart a
middle course on some of the
most divisive issues in D.C. poli-
tics. On housing, for example,
Duncan says she wants denser
housing around Metro stations
but also says on her website that
“each development should fit the
neighborhood” and boasts that
she won concessions from a de-
veloper building a project in her
neighborhood. On police, she
agrees with most of the candi-
dates in the Ward 3 race that D.C.
needs to hire more officers but
doesn’t push the number of
4,000 officers that the most pro-
police candidates are running
on, and focuses on the need to
hire more female officers, who
she says would “decrease aggres-
sion and increase community
trust.”
Duncan and Frumin are the
two candidates in the nine-per-
son Democratic primary field
who have raised and spent the
most money so far. Many others
are close behind in what has
become a high-spending race,
including advisory neighbor-
hood commissioner Ben Berg-
mann, former council staffer Eric
Goulet, former D.C. Library
board member Monte Monash
and Ward 3 Democrats Chair Phil
Thomas.
Other candidates have been
touting their endorsements, in-
cluding Bergmann’s from Great-
er Greater Washington, former
advisory neighborhood commis-
sioner Deirdre Brown’s from D.C.
Women in Politics, Frumin’s from
Jews United for Justice and the
Washington Teachers’ Union,
and Goulet’s from the D.C. Asso-
ciation of Realtors, Democrats
for Education Reform and The
Washington Post’s editorial
board, which is separate from the
news operation.
The Democratic primary is
June 21. The city mailed ballots
last week to every registered
voter, so many will cast their
votes in May and early June.
THE DISTRICT
Outgoing council member Cheh
throws her support to Tricia Duncan
LINDA FITTANTE
D.C. Council member Mary M. Cheh said she will be voting for
community volunteer Tricia Duncan, above, as her replacement.
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