The Latest
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Nominate a project for the 2026 Smart Cities Dive Community Project Awards
The awards will highlight innovation and effective use of technology to solve real community problems.
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Lime adds more e-bikes and e-scooters in select World Cup cities
Based on its experience at the Paris and Milan Olympic Games, the micromobility company will adjust operations and offer a 90-minute fixed-rate pass.
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Pedestrian death rates remain high: Smart Growth America study
More than three-quarters of cities studied saw higher average fatality rates over the past five years, but federal programs for pedestrian safety are at risk.
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FEMA
Is FEMA ready for disaster season?
While a new report warns of staffing shortages, vacant leadership posts and strained federal-state relationships, the agency’s acting administrator insists it is prepared for hurricane and wildfire season.
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Federal support for ‘critical’ local cybersecurity resource could be renewed under new bill
Sen. Mark Warner introduced legislation to restore federal funding for the Multi-State Information Sharing and Analysis Center, which many state and local governments once relied on for support.
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NY breaks ground on Second Avenue subway extension to East Harlem
The project moves forward after the Trump administration released funding it halted last year.
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What the World Cup reveals about cities’ growing heat risk
Extreme temperatures and wildfire smoke threaten athletes’ and fans’ health, highlighting the need to adapt infrastructure and public safety plans for a warming climate, scientists say.
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Seattle’s social housing experiment takes first major steps
Seattle Social Housing Developer agreed to purchase its first building and wrapped up a lottery to determine who will live there.
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These 10 US cities have the ‘stickiest’ downtowns
Frequency and length of visits by city residents make these 10 downtowns stand apart, Gensler says.
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Tracker
Air taxis and urban air mobility: The latest developments
The Miami-Dade Aviation Department will begin testing an air traffic management system to prepare for air taxi operations.
Updated June 8, 2026 -
Opinion
Federal money is still there. The rules for winning it have changed.
Priorities have shifted under the Trump administration, but billions in federal dollars are still available. Communities that adapt their messaging, align with new federal priorities and stay in the game can bring that money home.
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How local incentives helped clinch an apartment deal in a rent-controlled Maryland county
Investors took advantage of Montgomery County’s by-right Payment in Lieu of Taxes program to buy a multifamily building that will be converted to a mixed-income affordable housing community.
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Mayors speak with one voice: Housing tops nation’s urban agenda
At the U.S. Conference of Mayors’ annual meeting, bipartisan mayors from cities of all sizes called affordable housing their most pressing challenge and urged Congress to pass the ROAD to Housing Act.
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Illinois governor vows continued housing push as statewide zoning proposal hits a wall
The Illinois Municipal League actively opposed the housing bill that it said would preempt local land use and zoning authority.
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(2026). "Full Committee Markup (June 4, 2026)". Retrieved from T&I Committee Republicans/YouTube.
Surface Transportation LegislationHouse transportation committee commits to ‘safety, reliability’ while reviewing Trump FY 2027 budget ask
“We've had a productive session so far,” said Rep. Rick Larsen, D-Wash., during a markup session of the House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure.
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More federal funding for local parks could soon be available. Here’s how to apply.
A new funding round could provide cities with up to $15 million for parks and recreation projects. Local engagement and implementation plans could make or break applications, experts say.
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To celebrate a growing subway line, LA throws a launch party
The Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority emphasized the D Line's impact on the communities it will serve amid the glamor of the launch's dignitaries and celebrities.
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HUD’s point-in-time count misses this form of homelessness
Millions of people are estimated to be in “doubled-up” housing situations. Monitoring the trend could help cities prevent more of them from ending up on the street, one researcher says.
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Cities see opportunity in emerging sports markets
Long Beach, California, and five other cities are exploring how to capitalize on women’s sports and minor league franchises “to create permanent economic activity,” Mayor Rex Richardson says.
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How do transportation agencies address human trafficking? US DOT awards recognize innovation
New “counter-trafficking tools, initiatives, campaigns, and technologies” can qualify for monetary awards in a program accepting applications through June 22.
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Q&A
AI to find clogged drains? Possibilities, misconceptions and more on AI’s growth in the public sector
Smart Cities Dive spoke with Samsara Senior Vice President for Sales Engineering Tim Nagy about the rise of AI in local government and what the future could entail.
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How Charleston, South Carolina, is setting the stage for thousands of affordable homes by 2032
An “aggressive” new housing strategy includes pre-permitting city land and preapproving housing designs to fill gaps more quickly, the mayor said.
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To help public agencies reduce roadway risk, platform combines diverse datasets
The Safety Hub tool from Replica and Arity gives communities “the insight they need to act before tragedy occurs,” Arity’s president said.
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Lawsuit targets fair housing rule change
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s final rule amending how the Equal Credit Opportunity Act is applied “effectively guts” fair lending protections, according to four plaintiffs.
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Homelessness dropped 3% last year after record highs: HUD
A 4% decrease in people seeking emergency shelter was the largest contributor to the decline, according to the annual report.