The Daily Source of Urban Planning News
Kansas City Light Rail Crime 'Myths' - Part 1
<p>In part one of a two-part blog post, Jeffrey Spivak calls to question the Cato Institute's attempts to cast light rail as crime ridden.</p>
Corps Can't Be Held Responsible
<p>A federal court ruled recently that the Army Corps of Engineers could not be held liable for the levee fialures that caused the flooding of New Orleans during Hurricane Katrina.</p>
Mexico City Struggling with Infrastructure Problems
<p>As Mexico City's economy moves from industry to services, it is attracting new businesses but facing a legacy of haphazard infrastructure planning that may threaten its economic prosperity.</p>
Reaffirming Los Angeles' Industrial Land Use Policy
<p>To the chagrin of some local developers and politicians, the Los Angeles Community Redevelopment Agency and the city Planning Department have released a joint policy directive that limits the conversion of industrial land to residential uses.</p>
Questions Surround Atlanta Streetcar Proposal
<p>A proposed streetcar system in Atlanta has raised many questions about feasibility and funding.</p>
100 Best Cities For Jobs
<p>Salt Lake City, Utah, has been ranked as the best city for jobs in 2008 by <em>Forbes</em> magazine.</p>
When Out-of-Towners Crash, Cities Want Cash
<p>Resulting from high numbers of car accidents involving people from out of town, cities across the country are adopting measures that charge drivers and their insurance companies for the city services performed at crash sites.</p>
A Limit On Driving In California?
<p>Is a statewide cap on driving in the works? Bill Fulton says a regional driving limit may be the only way that California is able to reach its self-imposed mandates for reducing greenhouse gas emissions.</p>
Think I'll Go Out to Alberta
<p>The economic influence of the Alberta oil sands is so powerful that it's draining working-age men -- and vitality -- from smaller communities across Canada.</p>
FEATURE
Debating Detroit’s Redevelopment
BLOG POST
Getting Started on an Exit Project or Thesis in Planning
<p class="MsoNormal">My December <a href="/node/29121" target="_blank">blog</a> dealt with key problems faced by those heading for an end-of-school-year graduation—completing a proposal, choosing methods, starting to write, and dealing with formatting. This month I step back and ask some bigger questions: what kind of exit paper or project you should prepare, why, and when?</p>
Car 'Feebate' Under Consideration in California
<p>The California Assembly is considering a bill that would create the nation's first "feebate" -- a charge or rebate California drivers would pay or receive depending on how much greenhouse gas their cars emit.</p>
Chicago's Pay-to-Play Zoning
<p>A series of articles from the <em>Chicago Tribune</em> that look at zoning and the politics that shape the city's land use.</p>
Forcelosure Hot Spots
<p>This article from <em>Forbes</em> examines foreclosure data to map out the cities that have been hit hardest by the subprime mortgage bust.</p>
Eminent Domain Restrictions Don't Hurt Growth
<p>A recent report has found that restricting the government's eminent domain powers does not harm economic growth.</p>
Booming Alberta Announces 20-Year Plan for Infrastructure Spending
<p>Extensive freeway spending and a flexible municipal infrastructure fund are features of the 20-year plan for Alberta's infrastructure.</p>
BLOG POST
Tax and Burn Environmentalism
<p style="line-height: 200%" class="MsoNormal">We’re recognizing the scale of the global warming crisis just as there’s a parallel crisis of imagination about how to address environmental problems. Because of years of conservatives’ claims that government doesn’t work, and that the only option is to privatize and deregulate, we’re left believing that we can’t take decisive action in the public interest. We think we can do no more than charge a fee while allowing the smokestacks to keep belching. Call it tax-and-burn environmentalism: Rather than eliminating dangerous practices, tax-and-burn introduces taxes and leaves practices unreformed. Ironically, tax-and-burn often makes things easier for polluters.
Abu Dhabi to Push Carbon Underground
<p>In an effort to reduce carbon emissions from industrial plants, Abu Dhabi is planning to create a $4 billion underground carbon sequestration system -- a system that is expected to be closely watched by government and industry.</p>
Rent Control Under Fire In California
<p>A California ballot initiative heading to voters in June could bring an end to the state's rent control laws.</p>
Land Use Planning: Essential To Climate Protection
<p>In this op-ed, regional planner and California American Planning Association officer Hing Wong emphasizes the importance of land use planning in meeting climate protection goals, citing examples of APA award-winning projects in the Bay Area.</p>
Pagination
City of Camden Redevelopment Agency
City of Astoria
Transportation Research & Education Center (TREC) at Portland State University
Regional Transportation Commission of Southern Nevada
Toledo-Lucas County Plan Commissions
Urban Design for Planners 1: Software Tools
This six-course series explores essential urban design concepts using open source software and equips planners with the tools they need to participate fully in the urban design process.
Planning for Universal Design
Learn the tools for implementing Universal Design in planning regulations.