Mayor Eric Adams signed an executive order that requires city departments to evaluate their properties for potential housing development.

New York City Mayor Eric Adams is requiring city agencies to assess their property inventories in an effort to find sites for new affordable housing developments. As Marcia Kramer reports for CBS News, “In signing the executive order, the mayor wants agencies to look at every property and facility in their portfolios, including the sanitation building at 7 North Moore St. in Tribeca., for evaluation as possible housing sites, because the city faces a dire housing crisis.”
The mayor focused in on the city’s 578 miles of waterfront. Commenting on the area, Adolfo Carrion Jr., commissioner of the Department of Housing Preservation and Development, called it “a lot of publicly owned land there that we can exploit in the best sense of the word for the city's competitive edge in terms of housing its workforce and housing its future.”
City officials say every viable city property is on the table — with some “notable exceptions” that include the city’s most famous parks. The city has already engaged in some affordable housing projects on converted city properties, including a Manhattan library branch that was redeveloped into a new library and 174 housing units.
FULL STORY: Mayor Eric Adams on the hunt for affordable housing sites, orders NYC agencies to review own properties

Trump Administration Could Effectively End Housing Voucher Program
Federal officials are eyeing major cuts to the Section 8 program that helps millions of low-income households pay rent.

Planetizen Federal Action Tracker
A weekly monitor of how Trump’s orders and actions are impacting planners and planning in America.

Ken Jennings Launches Transit Web Series
The Jeopardy champ wants you to ride public transit.

Driving Equity and Clean Air: California Invests in Greener School Transportation
California has awarded $500 million to fund 1,000 zero-emission school buses and chargers for educational agencies as part of its effort to reduce pollution, improve student health, and accelerate the transition to clean transportation.

Congress Moves to End Reconnecting Communities and Related Grants
The House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee moved to rescind funding for the Neighborhood Equity and Access program, which funds highway removals, freeway caps, transit projects, pedestrian infrastructure, and more.

From Throughway to Public Space: Taking Back the American Street
How the Covid-19 pandemic taught us new ways to reclaim city streets from cars.
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