Category: Public Policy

Disappointment, Pessimism, Rage: Is this America at middle age?

Ben Brown
Ben Brown
Still wondering about why it’s so hard to have a civil conversation about planning for the future in so many places? Or why everyone seems so pissed about everything all the time? Could it have something to do with the telltale bulge in the waistline of American demography? (more…) Continue Reading
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Irony and Inevitability: Stumbling towards accountable public policy

Ben Brown
Ben Brown
By Wednesday morning, we’ll know which political party gained and which lost ground in Congress. As for learning about the direction of federal policy and its short-term impacts in states, regions and local communities: Not so much. But not for long. That’s because time is running out on the baked-in paralysis in... Continue Reading
Category Public Policy
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Going Viral, but Not in a Good Way

Ben Brown
Ben Brown
Hello, you in the hazmat suit. Can we talk? Though no one can authoritatively predict, from an epidemiology perspective, what will happen next, Ebola reached new levels of infection in the body politic last week. Republicans and Democrats seem pretty sure they’ve identified likely sources of toxicity. And it should... Continue Reading
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Are We There Yet? Affordability in the ‘New Normal’

Ben Brown
Ben Brown
Pretty soon we’ll have something like a decade of experience in losing our innocence about housing affordability. Isn’t it about time we got over it? For a good part of the last century, we trained generations of housing consumers and housing enablers to buy and sell into what Chuck Marohn calls a “growth Ponzi... Continue Reading
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The Chorus of “No Planning, Please” is Making My Head Hurt

Ben Brown
Ben Brown
In his July 10 New York Times column, David Brooks noodled about in a Brooksian sort of way with the notion of what is and what is not within the realm of predictability. Using Brazil’s loss in the World Cup as a hook, he argues that soccer -- unlike baseball, which has been reimagined by math nerds -- turns out to be... Continue Reading
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The Perils of Whimsy: Bookshelf reveals community dysfunction

Scott Doyon
Scott Doyon Twitter Instagram Facebook
Spoiler alert: This is not breaking news. The story's actually been at least temporarily resolved. Think of it more as a post-game analysis. Little Free Libraries -- resident-initiated community bookshelves -- are an increasingly popular tactic for bringing neighbors together through their shared love of browsing and... Continue Reading
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Housing Policy Repair for a New Era: Let’s review

Ben Brown
Ben Brown
Since the data keep rolling in, confirming changes we should have anticipated even before the Great Recession, maybe it’s time to revisit the tasks ahead for communities if they’re to avoid flunking the tests of livability and prosperity in the 21st century. Consider: Though a narrow sliver of the population... Continue Reading
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“People Habitat”: Kaid Benfield takes Smart Growth to a higher level

Scott Doyon
Scott Doyon Twitter Instagram Facebook
For several weeks now I’ve intended to write up my thoughts on “People Habitat,” the recently-released book from NRDC smart growth sensei -- and friend -- Kaid Benfield. Not that it’s anything he needs, mind you. A quick look at his reviews over on Amazon reveals a diverse collection of accolades, consistent only... Continue Reading
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Gentrification: We’re both the problem and the solution

Scott Doyon
Scott Doyon Twitter Instagram Facebook
Almost twenty years ago, just married, my wife and I bought an old house in a friendly but economically depressed old neighborhood. It was, at the time, a predominantly black neighborhood though, like many historic neighborhoods in and around Atlanta that predate our tumultuous, race-driven urban disinvestment of the 60s... Continue Reading
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Confessions of a Former Sprawl Addict: Speed humps on the road to recovery

Hazel Borys
Hazel Borys Twitter Facebook LinkedIn
Hi. I'm Hazel and I was a Sprawlaholic. If you've been reading awhile you may recall that, with the loving help of my friends and family, I went cold turkey, dumping life in a Florida subdivision for the intense urban charms of downtown Winnipeg. It was a life-changing move with no regrets. Yet, as good as it's been,... Continue Reading
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