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DC 911 outage caused by equipment failure - WTOP Weekend Headlines - Sunday, August 28, 2016

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wtop.com

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newsletter@wtop.com

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Sun, Aug 28, 2016 01:31 PM

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Update: Officials said in a press conference Sunday morning that the 911 system outage was caused by

Update: Officials said in a press conference Sunday morning that the 911 system outage was caused by equipment failure. They said investigations for the system failure are still underway. The system went down around midnight and calls did not go through for over an hour. [Logo] WEEKEND HEADLINES - August 28, 2016 [mobile-header-ad] [alt text here] [mobile-img] [alt text here] [DC 911 outage caused by equipment failure] Update: Officials said in a press conference Sunday morning that the 911 system outage was caused by equipment failure. They said investigations for the system failure are still underway. The system went down around midnight and calls did not go through for over an hour. [mobile-img] [alt text here] [Former Va. delegate accused of presenting 'knowingly false' defense] Virginia State Bar Association investigators said former Del. Joe Morrissey fought his sex scandal with a "knowingly false" defense. [mobile-img] [alt text here] [Va. Republicans opt for primary over convention for 2017] Virginia Republicans have chosen a primary rather than a convention for 2017 as a way to elect candidates for governor, lieutenant governor and attorney general. [mobile-img] [alt text here] [Community remembers young Md. rapper who was shot, killed] The death of an 18-year-old rapper from Suitland, Maryland, continues to shock members of his community as they held a vigil Saturday afternoon. [mobile-img] [alt text here] [Passes for new Smithsonian museum opening gone in minutes] “The demand for entry to this museum is more than we could have anticipated,” said an official with the National Museum of African American History and Culture. [mobile-img] [alt text here] [4 things to know about Metro track work: Aug. 28-Sept. 3] Here are four things to know about Metro's round-the-clock track work for the week of Aug. 28-Sept. 3. [See the full track work guide.] [mobile-img] [alt text here] [Friends, colleagues to remember slain Mississippi nuns] Those who knew the two nuns killed in their Mississippi home are gathering Sunday to remember them, as authorities continue to investigate. [mobile-img] [alt text here] [Employee from Va. smoothie chain diagnosed with hepatitis A] An employee at a Tropical Smoothie Cafe in Gainesville, Virginia, has hepatitis A, and the diagnosis has raised fears about the spreading of the virus. [mobile-img] [alt text here] [Move-in day: Students across region head back to campus] Students across the region are moving back onto campus for another year of learning. Share your move-in day moments by tweeting to @WTOP, emailing talkback@wtop.com or sending them through the WTOP app. [mobile-img] [alt text here] [Louisiana rescue animals seek new homes] When members of a Maryland animal rescue group drove to Tennessee this week to pick up animals from the Louisiana flood zone, they expected to get about 50. Instead they got about 80. [mobile-img] [alt text here] [Md. man with no symptoms spread Zika through sex] U.S. health officials on Friday reported the first case of Zika spread through sex by a man with no symptoms of the disease. The man had traveled to the Dominican Republic, where there is a Zika outbreak, but he didn’t get sick during the trip or when he returned. [mobile-img] [alt text here] [Tips to remove pesky bugs from yards, attics] Garden Editor Mike McGrath has tips on how to rid your home of insect pests like yellow jackets, grubs and even mosquitoes. [mobile-img] [alt text here] [Car dealers pile on the incentives] U.S. auto dealers have seen a slowdown in sales from what has been a breakneck pace, and they’re offering lots of incentives to set another record. [mobile-img] [alt text here] [Fall Movie Preview] Which movies should you put on your calendar this fall? [mobile-img] [alt text here] [How does your federal salary stack up?] Which feds get paid the most? Where do they work? How to men's and women's salaries compare? Federal News Radio looks at the latest data from the Office of Personnel Management. [mobile-img] [alt text here] [Far-reaching tribal solidarity displayed at pipeline protest] Native Americans from reservations hundreds of miles away from North Dakota have joined the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe’s growing protest against a $3.8 billion four-state oil pipeline. [mobile-img] [alt text here] [Europe’s refugee crisis simmers despite efforts to solve it] Overall, 2,901 people have died or disappeared crossing the Mediterranean in the first six months of 2016, most along the dangerous central route to Italy. [mobile-img] [alt text here] [Trump warns of regulations, taxes harming family farmers] Donald Trump said rival Hillary Clinton will push regulations and high taxes that will hurt family farmers as he campaigned in Iowa. [mobile-img] [alt text here] [After federal investigations, what has changed for Metro?] What can riders expect from Metro after several months of round-the-clock track work and additional safety problems highlighted by a series of federal investigations? [mobile-img] [alt text here] [Navy gets $2.7B attack submarine sponsored by Michelle Obama] It took thousands of shipyard employees in Connecticut, Rhode Island and Virginia, and submarine supply businesses nationwide to build the $2.7 billion submarine. [FEDERAL NEWS RADIO] [alt text here] [Sequestration cuts on horizon for 2017 if Congress doesn’t act] The White House’s biannual report to Congress says the House version of the 2017 spending bills would be $792 million above the limit for the defense and non-defense categories. 3400 Idaho Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20016 [Unsubscribe] | [View this email in your browser] If you believe this has been sent to you in error, please safely [unsubscribe].

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