- Brigid Schulte
- Reporter
Brigid Schulte is an enterprise reporter on the local staff. She writes stories that capture the way we live now and has reported on dying bats, early spring blooms, potty training controversies and adult women being diagnosed with ADHD in droves. She has also written about education and was part of the team that won the Pulitzer Prize for covering the Virginia Tech massacre. She came to the Post in 1999 after working as a national correspondent for Knight-Ridder Newspapers’ Washington Bureau and a stint covering southern politics. She lives in Alexandria, Virginia, with her husband and two children.
- HHS announces first nationwide safety standards for child care
- In D.C., parents miss work, lose jobs trying to get child-care subsidy
- Virginia Tech President Charles W. Steger announces plans to step down
- D.C. Council strips controversial homeless proposals from budget
- Homeless families protest mayor’s plan to move them out of shelters
- Women soldiers fought, bled and died in the Civil War, then were forgotten
- Victim in recovery: Aaron Hern, 11
- ‘Queen bee’ CEOs get scrutiny and flak while ‘king wasps’ get a free pass
- Arlington board will not eliminate higher child- care standards
- Movement aims to maintain high standards for child-care facilities in Arlington County
- Arlington County manager seeks to cut child care standards
- More fathers than mothers say they aren’t spending enough time with their kids
- After a baby’s death, a Virginia mother fights for stronger child-care standards
- In Virginia, church-run day-care centers are exempt from licensing standards
- Patients shared secrets, trusted doctor who allegedly videotaped them
- D.C. child-care providers threatened by stagnant subsidies for poor kids
- Body language experts say Obama exuded dominance and empathy
- Landmark family leave law doesn’t help millions of workers
- The jilted and the heartbroken shred their exes
- What’s so bad about American parents, anyway?
- Crash and yearn
- Boxer Tony Suggs is fighting to let go of the past
- Working-mother readers share stories of opting in and out of the workforce
- Build a Story: Tell us whether you opted out of the workforce or opted back in
- Movement to keep moms working is remaking the workplace
- Story Pick: Of the 1 percent, by the 1 percent, for the 1 percent
- Story Pick: Sohaib Athar and the tweets heard ’round the world
- Story Pick: Code Name Geronimo
- Story Pick: The Death of Osama bin Laden
- Story Picks: Ladies, Just When You Thought it was Safe (Sort of anyway) in the Water
- More women have ADHD ... or is it the stress of modern life?
- Christians reaffirm faith during Holy Week
- With no government shutdown, the show goes on in D.C.
- Plants’ earlier bloom times hurting some creatures
- Taylor Anderson, first U.S. victim of Japan tsunami, mourned at Richmond funeral
- In Ishinomaki, Japan, stories of survival and loss
- Frederick official’s comment that a woman’s place is in the home creates uproar
- Abortion clinics fear new Virginia law could shut them down
- It’s February in Washington — time for summer camp madness
- Annandale civic association elects dog as president
- Annandale civic association elects dog as president
- Wheaton neighborhood is the face of Montgomery's shift to majority minority
- Wheaton neighborhood is the face of Montgomery's shift to majority minority
- From pastures to bedroom community, rapid growth in Linton Hall mirrors state
- From pastures to bedroom community, rapid growth in Linton Hall mirrors state
- Girl's suspension a sign of the times for potty training
- Three-year-old suspended from Arlington preschool for too many potty accidents
- 'Space' oddity in Alexandria
- 'Three Eggs in Space': Public art that the public loves or loves to hate
- Ariz. rampage sends chill through Va.
- Ariz. rampage revives concerns about Va. mental health system
- Man, 81, killed by arriving MARC train
- Man, 81, killed by arriving MARC train in Gaithersburg
- Suspect was pulled over before shootings
- Jared Loughner's behavior never reported to mental health authorities: official
- In Arizona, anyone concerned can report odd behavior to mental-health experts
The Post Most: LocalMost-viewed stories, videos and galleries int he past two hours





