Seven-seven-what? After 74 years, D.C. braces for a new area code.
D.C. Politics
Seven-seven-what? After 74 years, D.C. braces for a new area code.
By Paul Schwartzman
Today at 3:05 p.m. EDT
The plethora of timeless symbols that define Washington include the White House, the Lincoln Memorial and a venerated area code that evokes power and prestige: 202 the digital entryway to the nations capital.
For now.
After 74 years, a city accustomed to all manners of change new presidents, new senators, new restaurants, new neighborhoods will face another shift:
a second area code.
Alongside 202, later this fall
there will be 771 sandwiched between 770 (in the Atlanta suburbs) and 772 (in east central Florida).
Not everyone is adjusting to the looming change with ease.
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By Paul Schwartzman
Paul Schwartzman specializes in political profiles and narratives about life, death and everything in between. Before joining The Washington Post, he worked at the New York Daily News, where he covered Rudolph W. Giulianis rise as mayor. Twitter
https://twitter.com/paulschwartzman