The Latest
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Addressing housing, climate change and AI in an unpredictable year
Community leaders described their efforts to tackle those and other key issues at the annual National League of Cities' City Summit in November.
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Opinion
How cities are using AI to keep drinking water safe
An important federal deadline for identifying and replacing lead and copper service lines is less than two years away. New technology can help communities meet the LCRI mandates.
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Emergency managers, meteorologists push back against breakup of NCAR climate research center
Dismantling the nation’s premier weather and climate institution would have “a horrible impact on the local level,” says the chair of the International Association of Emergency Managers USA Weather Caucus.
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Tracker
Air taxis and urban air mobility: The latest developments
Joby Aviation ramped up flight tests in 2025, readying for Federal Aviation Administration type certification.
Updated Dec. 19, 2025 -
HUD probes Boston over housing discrimination
The agency claims the city is discriminating against White residents via its equity and inclusion efforts in its housing strategy. The mayor's office called the probe an "unhinged attack” from Washington.
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The Municipal Cost Index
The federal government continues to stagger the release of data used to calculate the monthly Municipal Cost Index in the wake of the federal government shutdown.
Updated Dec. 19, 2025 -
GHSA, Waymo partner on safety training for first responders
As robotaxis expand to cities across the U.S., police, firefighters and EMTs need to learn how to interact with these vehicles safely, the Governors Highway Safety Association says.
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Appeals court to reexamine EPA’s power to block climate grants
The D.C. Circuit agreed to rehear a ruling that let the Environmental Protection Agency freeze $20 billion in Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund awards.
Updated Dec. 18, 2025 -
How do cities accelerate housing? Partnerships, land buying and zoning, experts say
Cities must be intentional about housing, a National League of Cities panel said.
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House introduces bipartisan housing legislation
Lawmakers said they will work in 2026 to advance the Housing for the 21st Century Act, which builds on a recent Senate bill and similarly aims to facilitate new development.
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NYC congestion zone air pollution measure fell 22% in 6 months
Significant emissions reductions in Manhattan’s tolling zone extended to the wider metropolitan New York City area, a Cornell University study found.
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San Francisco’s new zoning opens the door for more housing — but it might bring less than expected
The city needs a plan for 82,000 additional housing units by 2031 to meet state mandates. A study predicted the new zoning will lead to only 14,600.
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As EPA moves to fast-track data centers, some cities are moving to slow them down
The EPA is streamlining Clean Air Act permitting to accelerate development. Will local communities pay the price?
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Virginia data centers must pay ‘fair share,’ incoming lieutenant governor says
“There is new energy in this legislature, and with it a real opportunity to build new energy right here in the Commonwealth,” said Lt. Gov.-elect Ghazala Hashmi.
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DOT extends deadline to apply for intercity passenger rail grants
About $5 billion in funding is available to states or groups of states for new or improved rail service outside the Northeast Corridor.
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FEMA
Local governments need to step up as FEMA’s future remains uncertain, experts say
The upheaval in emergency management could ultimately strengthen a long-overlooked profession, former FEMA leaders said Monday during a Carnegie Institute panel.
Updated Dec. 16, 2025 -
Bellevue, Washington, wants faster permitting. Can AI help?
As the housing crisis rages on, cities are testing artificial intelligence to improve permitting processes.
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Trump calls for federal policy framework preempting state AI laws
Under a new executive order, states could lose federal funding if their AI laws are found to be burdensome.
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HUD withdraws homelessness grant opportunity ahead of court hearing
The department said it still plans to change the Continuum of Care program, but future changes will be “well in advance” of the next funding deadline.
Updated Dec. 15, 2025 -
What a $1.48 trillion pension gap means for cities and states
Unfunded liabilities have dropped, but public pensions remain deeply underfunded, a new analysis found. The report’s author calls for benefit-structure and cost-sharing reform.
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Tracker
Robotaxis: The latest developments
Waymo adds four more cities for public robotaxi rides as it sets a ridership record for 2025.
Updated Dec. 15, 2025 -
FEMA
Emergency managers expected direction on FEMA’s future. They got silence instead.
Capping nine months of reduced federal support and legal disputes, the abrupt shutdown of a FEMA review vote Thursday deepens uncertainty around disaster planning, experts say.
Updated Dec. 12, 2025 -
Making special days special in the world’s wedding capital: 2024 Exemplary Public Servant Paula Cook
Clark County, Nevada, Records Administration Manager Paula Cook works to create a welcoming environment for couples looking to tie the knot in Las Vegas.
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Column
As federal environmental health protections stall, cities and counties can still protect their residents
Federal resources, state and local best practices and taking a “health in all policies” approach can help local governments make progress on environmental health.
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Judge blocks federal control of California National Guard
The district court judge says the Trump administration overstepped its authority when it nationalized state troops and sent them across state lines, “effectively creating a national police force.”