The Latest
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Surface transportation legislation in 2026: What we know so far
Congress has begun work that will determine the next five years of funding and policies for highways, mass transit and other transportation modes.
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Sponsored by Energy Systems Group (ESG)
What a city of 25,000 can teach others about modernizing infrastructure
Reduced costs. Stronger services for the community. See how one city did it.
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DOJ sues Minnesota to block climate lawsuit against oil companies
Only the federal government can regulate greenhouse gas emissions, the suit argues, escalating a legal fight over whether state and local governments can pursue damages tied to climate change.
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AI procurement tool evaluates local government contract solicitations before they’re sent
More than 60% of public agencies receive an average of only two to five bids per solicitation, according to Euna Solutions. Its AI Solicitation Advisor aims to help bolster those numbers.
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Meet the 2026 Smart Cities Dive Public Service Award winners
Read about the local government leaders in Florida, New York and Texas being honored for how they’re driving local impact.
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State CISOs are losing confidence in their ability to secure public-sector data, study finds
Third-party security breaches, phishing and AI-enabled attacks are where they anticipate the largest cyberthreat risk in the coming year, a NASCIO-Deloitte survey found.
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7 ways cities are hardwiring climate action
Embedding climate into procurement, zoning and infrastructure decisions while reframing it as a quality-of-life issue is unlocking support for resilience in Cleveland, Miami and Boise, Idaho.
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How cities and transit agencies are preparing for the 2026 FIFA World Cup
An influx of out-of-town and international visitors creates challenges to keeping transit systems and roadways running smoothly.
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Affordable housing development is boosting Oklahoma’s economy: report
Every dollar in tax credit equity across 45 multifamily housing projects is yielding higher economic returns in the state, an Urban Institute study found.
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Opinion
Public buildings can power community resilience
Sustainability strategies are also the foundation of resilient design, which prepares public buildings to serve as lifelines when disaster strikes.
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Washington, D.C., grants over $600,000 for EV charging stations
The D.C. Department of Energy and Environment is splitting the grants among three companies, including one that retrofits them into existing infrastructure and was previously awarded IIJA grants.
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Mayors look to shape AI policy — and the technology itself — in new coalition
“Local governments must set the frameworks to shape the use and impacts of these technologies,” said Boston Mayor Michelle Wu, a member of the global Mayors AI Forum.
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Autonomous VW buses to begin microtransit service in Florida community
Beep and Moia plan to expand on-demand and scheduled circulator services throughout the country, Beep’s CEO said.
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Who should decide budgets? Some cities are starting to share the power.
Participatory budgeting is reshaping how funds are allocated, bringing residents into decisions that elected officials and staff traditionally controlled, an expert says.
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How transit agencies can hire and keep front-line workers
An Urban Institute researcher predicts that “under current trends, the cost of service will go up over time.”
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This New York City leader unlocked a century of data, turning paper files into actionable intelligence
Smart Cities Dive Public Service Award winner Janet Aristy is modernizing New York City's infrastructure systems while empowering the next generation of public servants.
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Leading with ‘grace and grit’ in a binational border county
Smart Cities Dive Public Service Award winner Betsy Keller has brought strategic planning, building modernization and a push to “make it about the people” to El Paso County, Texas.
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Retrieved from Nicole Nabers/X.
Fort Walton Beach, Florida’s finance director brings fiscal discipline after a period of scandal
After a period of scandal and staff turnover, Smart Cities Dive Public Service Award winner Nicole Nabors is rebuilding trust through technology and transparency.
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Housing energy efficiency requirements rescinded by HUD, USDA
The 2021 International Energy Conservation Code added $20,000 to the cost of new home construction, according to Trump administration estimates.
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Boston’s climate plan focuses on local execution, accountability as federal support shrinks
The city is using dashboards, pilots and partnerships to cut emissions, build resilience at the neighborhood level and “bring more happiness and justice” to Bostonians.
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Cities urged to apply now for safe streets and roads grants
The U.S. Department of Transportation’s SS4A funding opportunity may be its last if the program isn’t renewed, a Stantec executive said.
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Joby Aviation air taxi takes flight in NYC
The air taxi developer and the Federal Aviation Administration are demonstrating advanced air mobility in a nationwide tour.
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Water reuse is essential for economic growth, the EPA says. Experts see obstacles ahead.
EPA’s Water Reuse Action Plan 2.0 positions recycled water as critical to industries like semiconductors and data centers, but local capacity, policy gaps and lingering stigma could complicate delivery, an expert says.
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New York governor floats tax on high-end second homes in NYC
New York is one of several states exploring surcharges on second homes. The proposal could generate $500 million in annual revenue in New York City, Gov. Kathy Hochul said.
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$1.1B available for railroad grade-crossing safety
The Crossing Safety Program aims to address the over 2,000 collisions and nearly 300 fatalities yearly since 2021.
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Cities sue EPA for failing to uphold soot standard
“By ignoring the legal responsibility to uphold its own rule, U.S. EPA is willfully abandoning the agency’s duties under the Clean Air Act,” California Air Resources Board Chair Lauren Sanchez said.