In Seattle, City Hall wants to open the neighborhood planning process to new demographics. The changes have rattled traditional neighborhood councils.

In the urban contest between developers and NIMBYs, the concerns of renters, residents of color, and other underrepresented groups often get scant consideration. Seattle's Mayor Ed Murray and Department of Neighborhoods director Kathy Nyland want to change that.
Erica C. Barnett discusses a series of policy shifts, starting with last July's decision to cut ties and funding for Seattle's 13 Neighborhood District Councils. Instead, the city is seeking volunteers for a new Community Involvement Commission, which will represent substantially more diverse interests than the councils. The city will also form a renters' commission to represent that oft-ignored group.
Needless to say, traditional groups aren't happy. Barnett writes, "homeowners, who tend to be white, more affluent and older than the average resident, have shaped neighborhoods in their reflection — building a city that is consistently rated as one of the nation's most livable, as well as one of its most expensive [...] The shakeup has rattled traditional neighborhood groups, which have grown accustomed to outsized influence at City Hall."
FULL STORY: How Seattle Is Dismantling a NIMBY Power Structure

Maui's Vacation Rental Debate Turns Ugly
Verbal attacks, misinformation campaigns and fistfights plague a high-stakes debate to convert thousands of vacation rentals into long-term housing.

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

San Francisco Suspends Traffic Calming Amidst Record Deaths
Citing “a challenging fiscal landscape,” the city will cease the program on the heels of 42 traffic deaths, including 24 pedestrians.

Adaptive Reuse Will Create Housing in a Suburban Texas Strip Mall
A developer is reimagining a strip mall property as a mixed-use complex with housing and retail.

Study: Anti-Homelessness Laws Don’t Work
Research shows that punitive measures that criminalized unhoused people don’t help reduce homelessness.

In U.S., Urban Gondolas Face Uphill Battle
Cities in Latin America and Europe have embraced aerial transitways — AKA gondolas — as sustainable, convenient urban transport, especially in tricky geographies. American cities have yet to catch up.
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