The Latest
-
Floating light rail bridge — the world’s first — opens in Seattle area
Crowds showed up on opening day to ride the Crosslake Connection expansion to Sound Transit's Link 2 Line, expected to carry 50,000 daily riders.
-
Office-to-housing conversions grew 28% last year
New York City led other cities in converted residential units by a wide margin, followed by Washington, D.C., and Chicago, according to RentCafe.
-
Highsmith, Carol M. (2011). "Robert C. Weaver Federal Building, headquarters of HUD, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, Washington, D.C" [Photograph]. Retrieved from Wikimedia Commons.
HUD investigates Washington state housing program
The agency claims the Covenant Homeownership Program, which aims to remedy historic housing discrimination, may be racially discriminatory toward White people and other groups.
-
New York City program aims to fast-track affordable housing on city-owned land
The Neighborhood Builders Fast Track program will cut pre-development timelines for some projects nearly in half, Mayor Zohran Mamdani said.
-
Bus industry group launches scholarship for human trafficking survivors
Traffickers often use intercity buses to transport victims, according to the American Bus Association.
-
3 communities find success promoting composting
Stakeholders in three states discussed how local governments can work with composters to maximize diversion in a webinar the Institute for Local Self-Reliance hosted Wednesday.
-
Extreme heat is here. Here’s how 2 cities plan to deal with it.
From data-driven targeting to cross-agency coordination, Miami-Dade County and Philadelphia are mitigating heat risk with concrete interventions.
-
5 strategies to help transit ballot measures succeed
Early planning and collaboration with professionals and legislators are key to gaining support for locally funded transit improvements, experts say.
-
Indiana city bans groups from sending it homeless individuals from other jurisdictions
Fort Wayne, Indiana, is imposing penalties of up to $2,500 for organizations that relocate unhoused individuals to the city without approval.
-
Puget Sound Energy is turning to EVs for backup power and grid support
The utility is partnering with Ford and Kia to test whether electric vehicles can keep homes running and support grid resilience during outages.
-
Trump housing order could mean new barriers to federal funding for cities
Local governments may need to ease zoning and environmental rules to stay eligible for federal support, an attorney says.
-
Detroit to dedicate 100% of city-owned commercial property sales proceeds to affordable housing fund
The measure is expected to generate $4 million annually for affordable housing development and preservation.
-
Nominate someone today for the 2026 Smart Cities Dive Public Service Awards
Submit your nominations by March 31 to recognize outstanding local leaders who are making an impact in their communities.
-
Tracker
Robotaxis: The latest developments
Zoox will begin testing in Miami and Austin, Texas, and expand operations in San Francisco and Las Vegas.
Updated March 25, 2026 -
Office-to-housing conversion initiatives proliferate in California
State policymakers have been pursuing policy changes that remove barriers to converting older commercial buildings into housing, with mixed success.
-
Cities struggle to meet drinking water PFAS standards by EPA deadline
Communities are grappling with how to fund removing PFAS “forever chemicals” from their water supplies, experts said during a National League of Cities panel.
-
43% of public sector employees use AI at least a few times a year, Gallup finds
Less than 40% of the public sector employees surveyed said their organization has a clear AI strategy, according to a recent poll.
-
How smart transit bus doors could improve passenger safety
An artificial intelligence system from Wabtec can detect when riders enter or exit a bus.
-
New York’s MTA plans to replace more than a third of its subway fleet
“We are in the midst of a public transit renaissance in New York,” said Gov. Kathy Hochul.
-
City officials urge federal grant application reform
The “mind-numbing” grant application process could be improved through preparation, intention and building connections, city leaders said during a National League of Cities panel.
-
Retrieved from New York City Department of Housing Preservation and Development on March 23, 2026
NYC reinvigorates push for ADUs
The city launched a dedicated website and is restarting a program to offer up to $395,000 to help qualifying homeowners build an ancillary dwelling unit.
-
Opinion // Surface Transportation Legislation
To make housing more affordable, invest in infrastructure
Homes need roads, water systems and power to serve them. A good start is renewing the federal surface transportation funding set to expire in September, writes a building materials executive.
-
Cities sue EPA over endangerment finding repeal
A dozen cities and counties join states in challenging EPA’s rescission of a cornerstone climate rule, which leaves cities “to bear the costs of hotter summers, dirtier air, and extreme weather,” Denver’s mayor said.
-
Uber to buy up to 50,000 robotaxis from Rivian by 2030
The agreement includes an upfront purchase of 10,000 Rivian vehicles, with an option for 40,000 more. Uber previously committed to buy up to 20,000 autonomous vehicles from Lucid.
-
Idaho updates grant-management system with cloud-based platform
The modernization project consolidated multiple grant processes across state agencies into one system. It’s already saving time.