Photo by Phil Roeder on Flickr.

If you can’t read Greater Greater Washington every day, you’ll still be able to catch all our posts at a glance with Greater Greater Week in Review.

Featured posts:

Now you, too, can redraw DC’s wards: Yesterday, the Census released detailed population counts for the District of Columbia. That means elected leaders will start debating how to redraw DC’s wards.

Gene Weingarten is right: M Street SE is too wide: Washington Post columnist Gene Weingarten is the latest commentator-driver to be angered by speed cameras in DC. Weingarten says M Street SE’s 25-mph speed limit doesn’t match its 6-lane highway form, and he’s absolutely right.

Is your CaBi station getting full or empty?: With the weather warming up, there have been huge numbers of people riding Capital Bikeshare. How is Alta holding up keeping stations from being full or empty?

Rhee feared Hardy principal was weeding out poor kids: A new book on Michelle Rhee, The Bee Eater by journalist Richard Whitmire, reports an eyebrow-raising claim: That former Hardy Middle School principal Patrick Pope manipulated the admissions process to reduce the numbers of poor students gaining admission to the school.

Most popular:

How would Dulles’s rail compare to European airports?: The Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority board is still trying to decide whether to spend more money to build an underground Silver Line station close to the Dulles terminal, or to instead choose an elevated station near the parking garage.

Animation shows London’s bikeshare patterns: Meredith Begin from the DC Bicycle Advisory Council sent around this video animating bike sharing usage in London for one day.

Will the Silver Line produce sprawl like highways do?: Here in the Washington, DC area, our Metro system is expanding with the Silver Line. It’s always great to see transit flourishing, and it will be nice to be able to take the Metro all the way to Dulles without switching to the bus.

Ward 2 now too large, wards 7 and 8 too small: The Census has released its DC data which will be used for redistricting. Ward 2 will need to shrink, while wards 7 and 8 will need to grow slightly.

How should DC redraw ANC boundaries?: The US Census Bureau will be releasing detailed data for the District of Columbia this week, which will kick off the decennial process of adjusting DC’s wards and, also very importantly, the boundaries for Advisory Neighborhood Commissions (ANCs).

Other posts:

Matt Johnson has lived in the Washington area since 2007. He has a Master’s in Planning from the University of Maryland and a BS in Public Policy from Georgia Tech. He lives in Dupont Circle. He’s a member of the American Institute of Certified Planners, and is an employee of the Montgomery County Department of Transportation. His views are his own and do not represent those of his employer.