The Washington Post - USA (2022-06-07)

(Antfer) #1

B8 EZ RE THE WASHINGTON POST.TUESDAY, JUNE 7 , 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

81° 3:00 p.m.
61° 4:57 a.m.
82°/65°
97° 1925
46° 1894

81° 2:05 p.m.
54° 4:14 a.m.
80°/59°
93° 2021
39° 19 76

83° 1:20 p.m.
53° 4:34 a.m.
81°/60°
99° 1925
46° 199 7

Washington 2:10 a.m. 8:45 a.m. 2:15 p.m. 9:11 p.m.
Annapolis 5:27 a.m. 11:26 a.m. 6:12 p.m. none
Ocean City 1:37 a.m.
8:05 a.m. 2:10 p.m. 8:17 p.m.
Norfolk 3:21 a.m. 9:48 a.m. 4:01 p.m. 10:16 p.m.
Point Lookout 1:23 a.m. 7:29 a.m. 2:15 p.m. 8:29 p.m.


78
°
69 ° 85
°
70 ° 85
°
66 ° 84
°
67 ° 77
°
62 ° 79
°
65 °

Sun 5:43 a.m. 8:31 p.m.
Moon 12:58 p.m. 1:45 a.m.
Venus 3:56 a.m. 5:32 p.m.
Mars 2:34 a.m. 2:55 p.m.
Jupiter 2:18 a.m. 2:29 p.m.
Saturn 12:40 a.m. 11:13 a.m.

June 7
First
Quarter

June 14
Full

June 20
Last
Quarter

June 28
New

0.00"
0.46"
0.78"
19.42"
16.91"

0.00"
0.42"
0.89"
17.64"
18.13"

0.00"
0.03"
0.81"
19.05"
18.04"

Blue Ridge: Today, mostly cloudy; some rain and a
thunderstorm spreading from southern parts to central
parts. High 61 to 65. Winds south–southwest 12–25 mph.
Tonight, a couple of showers, a thunderstorm, except a
thunderstorm in central parts.


Atlantic beaches: Today, partly sunny, breezy; humid in
the north. High 74 to 83. Winds south–southeast 10–20
mph. Tonight, mostly cloudy, humid; a shower in the north.
Low 68 to 72. Winds south 8–16 mph. Wednesday, more
humid, a stray thunderstorm.


Pollen: High
Grass High
Trees Moderate
Weeds Moderate
Mold Moderate

UV: Very High
10 out of 11+

Air Quality: Good
Dominant cause: Ozone

81/69

83/7 1

74/70

80/70

80/69

76/70

79/6 7

75/65

74/65

81/ 73

79/ 72

78/66 81/^69

74/63

67/59 78/69
69°

67°

71°

74°

Waterways: Upper Potomac River : Today, partly sunny, then clouds.
Wind south 6–12 knots. Waves 2 feet or less. Visibility clear. • Lower
Potomac and Chesapeake Bay
: Today, partly sunny, then clouds. Wind
south 10–20 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 3.60 feet today, falling to 3.50 Wednesday. Flood stage at
Little Falls is 10 feet.


Albany, NY 81/62/r 77/58/pc
Albuquerque 96/67/pc 93/65/pc
Anchorage 62/51/c 68/54/pc
Atlanta 86/72/t 86/71/t
Austin 101/74/pc 101/73/s
Baltimore 79/67/t 86/67/t
Billings, MT 68/47/pc 76/57/c
Birmingham 87/72/t 86/70/t
Bismarck, ND 63/46/sh 72/50/c
Boise 76/58/s 80/56/pc
Boston 79/64/pc 74/64/sh
Buffalo 67/55/r 71/56/pc
Burlington, VT 82/62/r 77/58/pc
Charleston, SC 87/73/pc 91/74/sh
Charleston, WV 76/62/t 81/61/t
Charlotte 84/69/pc 88/69/t
Cheyenne, WY 74/45/pc 72/54/c
Chicago 72/58/pc 66/57/sh
Cincinnati 78/59/t 79/61/t
Cleveland 72/57/sh 73/56/t
Dallas 97/77/pc 96/76/pc
Denver 80/52/pc 78/56/pc

Des Moines 77/61/c 76/56/pc
Detroit 74/55/pc 73/57/pc
El Paso 103/75/s 104/76/pc
Fairbanks, AK 74/49/s 69/47/s
Fargo, ND 69/50/c 72/50/pc
Hartford, CT 80/64/pc 79/64/sh
Honolulu 86/73/pc 86/71/pc
Houston 96/78/pc 97/75/pc
Indianapolis 76/57/pc 77/59/sh
Jackson, MS 92/74/s 92/73/pc
Jacksonville, FL 89/72/t 91/72/t
Kansas City, MO 81/65/t 81/57/c
Las Vegas 104/81/s 106/81/s
Little Rock 84/72/t 84/71/t
Los Angeles 81/62/pc 82/65/s
Louisville 83/65/t 83/63/t
Memphis 85/72/t 84/72/t
Miami 85/74/t 89/76/t
Milwaukee 67/55/pc 66/57/sh
Minneapolis 71/57/sh 74/57/pc
Nashville 86/70/t 84/68/t
New Orleans 92/77/pc 92/78/s
New York City 77/65/pc 79/65/t
Norfolk 83/71/pc 86/71/t

Oklahoma City 84/70/pc 83/67/c
Omaha 77/61/t 77/57/pc
Orlando 93/73/t 93/74/c
Philadelphia 81/69/pc 85/69/t
Phoenix 107/83/s 109/85/pc
Pittsburgh 71/56/t 77/57/pc
Portland, ME 72/59/pc 68/57/c
Portland, OR 76/57/pc 74/56/c
Providence, RI 77/63/pc 73/64/sh
Raleigh, NC 86/70/pc 89/70/t
Reno, NV 88/57/pc 90/59/pc
Richmond 81/69/c 87/68/t
Sacramento 91/59/s 90/60/s
St. Louis 83/68/c 81/62/sh
St. Thomas, VI 87/78/t 87/78/s
Salt Lake City 82/59/s 90/66/pc
San Diego 70/62/pc 71/62/pc
San Francisco 68/58/s 71/56/s
San Juan, PR 90/77/t 90/77/pc
Seattle 73/53/pc 68/53/c
Spokane, WA 71/54/pc 72/52/c
Syracuse 75/56/r 73/57/pc
Tampa 92/77/t 91/79/t
Wichita 84/68/pc 79/62/c

Addis Ababa 72/54/sh 73/53/sh
Amsterdam 63/53/pc 64/56/t
Athens 85/69/pc 85/68/pc
Auckland 65/54/c 65/55/pc
Baghdad 113/83/pc 111/82/pc
Bangkok 92/81/t 94/81/c
Beijing 84/58/c 76/54/r
Berlin 76/56/c 77/59/t
Bogota 64/49/t 63/49/sh
Brussels 67/55/t 66/53/r
Buenos Aires 59/49/c 59/50/pc
Cairo 95/74/s 98/81/s
Caracas 74/64/sh 73/63/sh
Copenhagen 63/54/r 64/56/c
Dakar 83/76/s 84/76/c
Dublin 63/53/pc 63/47/t
Edinburgh 62/49/pc 56/50/r
Frankfurt 72/54/t 72/53/r
Geneva 73/51/t 65/54/t
Ham., Bermuda 78/71/pc 78/72/pc
Helsinki 68/52/pc 67/52/sh
Ho Chi Minh City 94/78/t 94/79/t
Hong Kong 87/79/t 86/80/t

Islamabad 108/81/pc 109/82/pc
Istanbul 75/63/pc 75/63/t
Jerusalem 82/62/s 84/64/s
Johannesburg 66/42/s 67/41/s
Kabul 86/67/s 82/65/c
Kingston, Jam. 86/78/t 87/79/t
Kolkata 97/84/pc 97/84/pc
Kyiv 78/61/pc 80/62/pc
Lagos 88/76/t 87/74/t
Lima 67/60/pc 67/60/pc
Lisbon 79/63/s 77/64/pc
London 69/57/sh 69/54/t
Madrid 91/62/s 89/64/pc
Manila 93/81/t 93/81/t
Mexico City 83/59/t 82/59/t
Montreal 77/60/c 74/59/pc
Moscow 69/50/pc 75/54/pc
Mumbai 91/86/pc 92/85/t
Nairobi 76/58/c 73/56/sh
New Delhi 111/92/pc 109/91/pc
Oslo 64/51/r 62/52/sh
Ottawa 69/56/r 73/53/pc
Paris 72/57/pc 71/54/t
Prague 64/54/t 73/56/t

Rio de Janeiro 80/68/pc 77/70/pc
Riyadh 112/86/s 113/88/s
Rome 85/64/pc 83/66/pc
San Salvador 80/69/t 82/69/t
Santiago 63/39/pc 64/39/s
Sarajevo 79/54/t 74/55/t
Seoul 78/58/c 78/61/c
Shanghai 81/65/c 83/68/c
Singapore 88/77/t 88/77/pc
Stockholm 65/51/r 67/51/c
Sydney 62/47/s 57/45/s
Taipei City 78/68/r 73/70/r
Tehran 95/76/pc 98/79/c
Tokyo 70/60/sh 67/61/sh
Toronto 67/53/r 75/57/pc
Vienna 80/60/t 74/58/t
Warsaw 80/61/c 73/60/t

Today
T-storm

Wednesday
T-storm,
humid

Thursday
Morning
shower

Friday
Mostly cloudy

Saturday
T-storm

Sunday
T-storm

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: +3.1° yr. to date: +0.4°

High: Sweetwater, TX 109°
Low: Angel Fire, NM 29°

World
High: Jahra, Kuwait 122°
Low: Storm Hills, Canada 20°

Weather map features for noon today.

WIND: S 8–16 mph
HUMIDITY: Moderate

CHNCE PRECIP: 40%


FEELS*: 82°

W:
H:

P:

FEELS: 86°

SSW 6–12 mph
High

80%
W:
H:

P:

FEELS: 86°

WNW 8–16 mph
Moderate

40%
W:
H:

P:

FEELS: 84°

ESE 4–8 mph
Moderate

20%
W:
H:

P:

FEELS: 78°

N 7–14 mph
Moderate

90%
W:
H:

P:

FEELS: 83°

NNW 6–12 mph
Moderate

85%


Showers possible


Clouds will be numerous through
the day. A couple of showers will be
possible as soon as midday, with a
chance they will last through the
afternoon. Any rain should be light.
Highs will be around 80. Winds will be from the
south, about 10 mph, with gusts near 20 mph.


The Weather


WASHINGTONPOST.COM/WEATHER. TWITTER: @CAPITALWEATHER. FACEBOOK.COM/CAPITALWEATHER


Md. Democrats go on attack in debate


from decades in public office —
of flip-flopping on whether to
support a sweeping $4 billion
education program the next gov-
ernor will implement.
“My friend here, Franchot,
says he now supports it,” Perez
said. “That’s not what he said
during the deliberations, and
that’s not what his actions show.”
The program is a marquee
Democratic accomplishment
that will funnel cash into poor
schools, teacher pay, tutors, pre-
kindergarten and scores of other
programs. Most candidates have
campaigned on implementing it
— and several have called for it to
go even further to address losses
from the pandemic.
Franchot, who calls himself “a
fiscal moderate,” deflected the
accusation in the debate and said
in an interview afterward that he
has long been skeptical the state
can afford it. But, he added, as
governor he would be obligated
to fund it. “We’re going to take a
look at it,” he said.
Author and former nonprofit
executive Wes Moore directly
questioned Franchot’s integrity,
accusing the four-term comp-
troller of accepting donations
from 12 people with contracts
before the Board of Public
Works, on which Franchot sits.
“When we’re talking about
integrity, pay-for-play is not part
of an integrity pledge,” Moore
said.
Franchot shrugged off the
charge. “ I have the integrity of
my long service in politics that’s
been totally vetted, and I come
back to the fact that the voters
have this trust and confidence in
me,” he said.
The field boasts impressive
political and public service résu-
més, qualifications candidates
say are critical to taking back the
governor’s mansion from Repub-
lican control. Despite Demo-
crats’ 2-to-1 registration advan-
tage in Maryland, the party has
lost three of the past five gover-
nor’s races and is eager to elevate
a candidate capable of winning
in November.
Franchot, who has spent 20
years as a state delegate and the
past 15 years as the state’s chief
tax collector, has sided with Ho-
gan on some issues that rankled
the Democratic Party’s leader-
ship, but Franchot has pitched
himself as an independent politi-

DEBATE FROM B1 cian.
Moore is a first-time candidate
who collected many high-profile
party endorsements and demon-
strated fundraising prowess,
raising the most money in the
field as of January, the most
recent data available.
Perez, who is also a former
chair of the Democratic National
Committee, has consolidated
support from labor groups.
Both Moore and Perez pressed
each other on their pasts.
Moore raised the Congres-
sional Black Caucus’s 2018 no-
confidence vote about Perez to
suggest he would not do enough
for Black voters. (Perez replied
that he has and he would.)
Perez said that while he was
negotiating settlements during
the mortgage crisis, Moore was
making money working at Cit-
ibank. (Moore noted he was not
working in mortgages.)
John B. King Jr., former educa-
tion secretary under President
Barack Obama, questioned
whether Moore was involved
with a company that condoned
predatory lending; Moore dis-
missed that claim.
But amid the sniping, the
candidates also laid out broad
visions for the state.
Ashwani Jain noted he was
eschewing corporate donations
and paid campaign staffers, and
pitched a long list of policy ideas,
including replacing police offi-
cers in schools with public health
professionals and eliminating
the state income tax for lower-in-
come residents.
Doug Gansler, a former attor-
ney general, said that “this elec-
tion is about crime and criminal
justice,” and pitched himself as a
law enforcement candidate capa-
ble of tackling rising violence. He
suggested universal prekinder-
garten and child care, but did not
offer specifics.
Franchot suggested forgiving
student loans of people who live
in the state for five years and
creating more community health
centers statewide. He called vio-
lence around the state a threat to
economic vitality. “If we don’t
have any public safety or a con-
cept of public safety, we can’t
have a thriving economy,” he
said.
King, who emphasized his role
in education, said the state’s
sweeping education plan “should
be the floor, not the ceiling,” and
was the only candidate who did

not endorse a holiday from the
state’s gas tax, saying the state
should invest in reducing de-
pendence on oil: “We need to act
like climate change is the exis-
tential threat that it is,” he said.
Former Prince George’s county
executive Rushern Baker touted
his record leading that county
and his ability to pull the levers
of government. He noted crime
reductions and economic devel-
opment in the county, and said
he was using public financing for
his campaign because “I don’t
want corporations or special in-
terests to think they can control
what we’re trying to do.”
Jon Baron, a former nonprofit
executive and federal official,
touted his data-driven approach
to the state’s problems, including
“focused deterrents” that offer
job pathways and counseling to
violent offenders — and stricter
penalties if they break the law
again. He also pitched high-qual-
ity tutoring for every struggling
first- and second-grader in the
state, which he said data shows is
effective.
Moore noted that career politi-
cians have had decades to ad-
dress the state’s issues and failed.
He promised to address child
care, crime, mental health and
education with an eye to equity
and to “tackle these problems
with a sense of urgency that no
one else will.”
He said that with rising costs
and crime, people are not “feel-
ing safe, both in our communi-
ties and in our own skin.”
Perez touted his varied career
path as a civil rights prosecutor,
state and local official, political
organizer and former labor sec-
retary, encouraging voters “to do
your homework” on which candi-
dates have proven records in
public service.
“If you want to figure out what
someone has done in the future,
look at what they have done in
the past,” he said.
Jerome Segal, one of the two
Democratic candidates not in-
cluded in the debate because
they did not meet Maryland
Public Television’s eligibility cri-
teria, said Monday he was con-
sidering legal action over being
excluded, but he did not specify
which laws he believed were
broken. The station later invited
him to a separate interview to be
aired later, to which he agreed.
Perennial candidate Ralph Jaffe
also was not invited.

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