The Latest
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5 cities with congestion pricing
In 2025, New York City joined other major global cities that have implemented tolling programs to reduce traffic in select areas. Other U.S. cities are considering similar plans.
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Uber and Lyft CEOs want to add more robotaxis
The ride-hailing companies are partnering with several robotaxi and technology companies to bring more AVs to more cities.
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LA County sees second year of homelessness declines, ends longstanding partnership with city of LA
A 4% drop in homelessness signals momentum, but Los Angeles city leaders warn the county’s plan to launch its own homeless services department could threaten progress across the region.
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EPA considers terminating $7B Solar For All program
If the Trump administration moves forward to claw back the funding, “we will see them in court,” said Kym Meyer, litigation director at the Southern Environmental Law Center.
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Deep Dive
Waymo readies its robotaxis for winter weather
The company has tested its autonomous ride-hailing vehicles in Boston, New York City and Philadelphia. Can they handle snow, ice and winter storms?
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5 takeaways from Harvard’s 2025 state of housing report
Record unaffordability and looming federal funding cuts are driving housing uncertainty, a Joint Center for Housing Studies report warns. Here’s what local government leaders should know.
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AI could cut disaster infrastructure losses by 15%, new research finds
Artificial intelligence applications like predictive maintenance and digital twins can help keep the power on and the roads open during natural disasters — and save $70 billion in infrastructure losses by 2050, according to a Deloitte Global report.
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Q&A
New Oakland, Calif., development to add 235 affordable units after nearly 10 years on hiatus
Modular construction is a powerful strategy for maximizing efficiency in building new housing, MBH Architects director Timothy Haley says.
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Housing shortages hit low-income renters the hardest, Pew report finds
While rent is stabilizing in high-growth cities, displacement and homelessness are surging in housing-constrained metros.
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‘RoboCops’ may be headed to the US
After years of development in Dubai, AI-powered police robots are moving toward deployment in New York and Florida, Micropolis founder says.
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Tracker
US high-speed rail projects: The latest news
As the state faces a $4 billion loss in federal funds for its high-speed rail project, new legislation requires the California High-Speed Rail Authority to outline potential funding sources, financing options and cost-reduction strategies.
Updated Aug. 5, 2025 -
6 U.S. cities will get data analytics, AI support via international alliance
The Bloomberg-backed City Data Alliance aims to equip city leaders with tools and coaching to modernize services and meet evolving resident needs.
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Single-family rent growth slows as new supply surges — but affordability pressures remain
Overall prices remain high following five years of rapid growth, with some markets requiring $200,000 in annual income to comfortably rent a three-bedroom home.
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Tariffs make transit buses more expensive
North American bus manufacturer New Flyer reported strong demand for transit buses and a shift away from zero-emission vehicles in its second-quarter earnings call.
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Denver development recruits its river for urban flood control
The River Mile project is treating the South Platte River as natural infrastructure, delivering flood protection, recreation and economic opportunity on land once considered undevelopable.
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Xcel Energy ‘prepared to go to trial’ to fight Colorado fire liability
The company contends that it did not start the late 2021 Colorado blaze, which caused an estimated $2 billion in damages.
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Community-based safety solutions drive 22.6% drop in homicides since 2020, Democratic mayors say
Cities are reporting historic decreases in violent crime, but mayors warn that recent federal grant cancellations jeopardize the programs that fueled these results.
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Legislation to address Illinois RTA’s fiscal cliff faces uncertain future
The bills could add more than $1 billion in new operating revenue but raised concerns over new mandates and agency responsibilities.
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Opinion
The weather is changing. Here’s how utilities can adapt.
Climate READi, developed by energy providers, policymakers and government agencies, can help energy companies prioritize investments and adapt the evolving electric system to the climate of the future.
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Can cities and states keep their roads in good shape?
With an influx of pandemic-era funds already spent, many states anticipate funding gaps over the next decade that could threaten road safety and infrastructure reliability.
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No zoning code? That’s a problem, one Virginia city discovered.
Procedural missteps can derail even well-supported measures to eliminate single-family zoning — a problem Charlottesville, Virginia, is now addressing.
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Cities and waste facility operators turn to AI for recycling education revamp
As recycling rates stagnate, cities are testing smarter ways to help residents sort waste — from tamales to chopsticks — right at the bin.
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EPA’s move to gut key climate regulation raises stakes for city leaders
A repeal of the endangerment finding would make local climate policy a new battleground in continuing tensions between the Trump administration and cities, a legal scholar suggests.
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Senate tackles housing affordability crisis with bipartisan bill
Mayors applauded the Senate’s ROAD to Housing Act proposal to speed housing development, cut red tape and fund local innovation.
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Capital One delivers few details on $265B community plan
Local officials are still waiting for clarity on how the community investment proposal, part of the card issuer’s effort to acquire Discover Financial, will play out in their neighborhoods.