Governance & Finance: Page 41


  • A detailed landscape design plan showing topographic contour lines, orange building illustrations, green trees, and directional arrows. The layout includes winding paths and clustered vegetation. A triangular scale ruler lies on the left, and three colored pencils, colored blue, green, and yellow, rest on the lower right corner of the page.
    Image attribution tooltip
    Getty Images
    Image attribution tooltip
    Column

    How redevelopment revitalizes a community

    Editor's note: This article was originally published in American City & County, which has merged with Smart Cities Dive to bring you expanded coverage of city innovation and local government. For the latest in smart city news, explore Smart Cities Dive or sign up for our newsletter.Many citie...

    By Sarah Lee • Jan. 10, 2022
  • Image attribution tooltip
    Alex Wong via Getty Images
    Image attribution tooltip

    Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg praises smart city innovation at CES

    In a virtual address last week, Buttigieg said he anticipates that cities will be built on connected technology and guided by government policy that encourages collaboration, experimentation and support for workers.  

    By Jan. 10, 2022
  • A detailed landscape design plan showing topographic contour lines, orange building illustrations, green trees, and directional arrows. The layout includes winding paths and clustered vegetation. A triangular scale ruler lies on the left, and three colored pencils, colored blue, green, and yellow, rest on the lower right corner of the page.
    Image attribution tooltip
    Getty Images
    Image attribution tooltip
    Column

    Repurposing the urban garage: How to monetize unused parking assets

    For as long as the United States has been a car-centric society, we’ve been concerned with parking. Drivers spend an average of 17 hours a year looking for parking; and especially in urban centers, businesses must make sure residents, visitors, shoppers and employees have parking available within walking distance.

    By Jeremy Zuker • Jan. 6, 2022
  • A detailed landscape design plan showing topographic contour lines, orange building illustrations, green trees, and directional arrows. The layout includes winding paths and clustered vegetation. A triangular scale ruler lies on the left, and three colored pencils, colored blue, green, and yellow, rest on the lower right corner of the page.
    Image attribution tooltip
    Getty Images
    Image attribution tooltip
    Column

    In 2022, public employers face hiring challenges, opportunity

    In 2022, public employers face hiring challenges, opportunity

    Jan. 5, 2022
  • New York City skyline
    Image attribution tooltip
    Getty Images
    Image attribution tooltip

    12 predictions about the trends that will shape smart cities in 2022

    As local leaders continue to adapt to the tremendous changes that the past year brought, industry players share how they anticipate cities will evolve.

    By Cailin Crowe • Jan. 5, 2022
  • A detailed landscape design plan showing topographic contour lines, orange building illustrations, green trees, and directional arrows. The layout includes winding paths and clustered vegetation. A triangular scale ruler lies on the left, and three colored pencils, colored blue, green, and yellow, rest on the lower right corner of the page.
    Image attribution tooltip
    Getty Images
    Image attribution tooltip
    Column

    Indiana city leverages Rescue Plan funds for long-term, immediate community benefit

    Indiana city leverages Rescue Plan funds for long-term, immediate community benefit

    By Andy Castillo • Jan. 4, 2022
  • virtual senior center
    Image attribution tooltip
    Permission granted by Selfhelp Community Services
    Image attribution tooltip
    Deep Dive

    Older adults turn to technology during an ‘epidemic of loneliness’

    The pandemic kick-started local efforts to get more older adults online with the help of federal broadband investments to bridge the digital divide.

    By Cailin Crowe • Jan. 4, 2022
  • Image attribution tooltip
    Taylor McKnight/Smart Cities Dive
    Image attribution tooltip

    Q&A’s from 2021 that spotlight 13 smart cities voices

    Revisit the year's one-on-one conversations, including with tech and climate leaders in Honolulu, Phoenix and San Diego and with execs at Revel, Veo and Drop Mobility.

    Dec. 23, 2021
  • A car with front-end damage is being loaded onto a flatbed truck while several more crashed vehicles are seen behind it on an expresway near downtown Chicago.
    Image attribution tooltip
    Scott Olson via Getty Images
    Image attribution tooltip

    To cut traffic deaths, safety groups call for an approach that factors in human error

    The USDOT is expected to put out the first National Roadway Safety Strategy in January. Can safety officials, law enforcement, automakers and government regulators agree on how to stop the surge in traffic fatalities?

    By Dec. 21, 2021
  • A detailed landscape design plan showing topographic contour lines, orange building illustrations, green trees, and directional arrows. The layout includes winding paths and clustered vegetation. A triangular scale ruler lies on the left, and three colored pencils, colored blue, green, and yellow, rest on the lower right corner of the page.
    Image attribution tooltip
    Getty Images
    Image attribution tooltip
    Column

    Grand jury report on Surfside condo collapse proposes dozens of policy recommendations

    Editor's note: This article was originally published in American City & County, which has merged with Smart Cities Dive to bring you expanded coverage of city innovation and local government. For the latest in smart city news, explore Smart Cities Dive or sign up for our newsletter.Around 1:3...

    By Andy Castillo • Dec. 21, 2021
  • Image attribution tooltip
    Christopher Furlong via Getty Images
    Image attribution tooltip

    To correct ‘unsustainable’ rental market, ‘all of the above’ policy needed: report

    As cities weigh strategies like rent control and legal assistance for renters, a new report finds little agreement among tenants and property owners. 

    By Jason Plautz • Dec. 20, 2021
  • Image attribution tooltip
    Lindsey Wasson/Getty Images via Getty Images
    Image attribution tooltip

    Seattle’s regional transit system adopts plans for more equitable service

    The King County Council unanimously approved a series of long-range plans that will expand service for underrepresented communities, a shift from its historic focus on serving commuters and suburban riders.

    By Jason Plautz • Dec. 16, 2021
  • Image attribution tooltip
    Anna Moneymaker via Getty Images
    Image attribution tooltip
    Deep Dive

    Living wage ordinances’ greatest effect may be on public opinion

    The living wage movement fought to boost pay for city contractor employees. These efforts had limited community effects, but they likely laid the groundwork for today’s movement toward higher minimum wages, researchers said.

    By Adina Solomon • Dec. 13, 2021
  • Boston MBTA train to Braintree at an outdoor station in foggy, wet weather
    Image attribution tooltip
    Maddie Meyer via Getty Images
    Image attribution tooltip

    Boston’s new chief of streets to steer city beyond car-centric transportation

    Former city CIO Jascha Franklin-Hodge will begin the role in January, aiming to support the sustainable transportation ideas that recently elected Mayor Wu campaigned on, including fare-free bus routes. 

    By Cailin Crowe • Dec. 10, 2021
  • DSNY workers collecting waste in New York
    Image attribution tooltip
    Permission granted by Clare Miflin
    Image attribution tooltip

    New York’s mayor-elect faces calls for cleaner streets, modernized waste systems

    The city's sidewalks are infamous for mountains of garbage bags. A new "Put Waste to Work" campaign offers a rethink of curbside waste management design and calls for more accessible, higher-tech compost systems.

    By Cole Rosengren • Updated Dec. 6, 2021
  • Image attribution tooltip
    Alex Wong via Getty Images
    Image attribution tooltip

    As infrastructure funds begin to flow, climate, safety, equity impacts are not enough, some say

    With most Transportation Department infrastructure funding going to roads and bridges, the money could perpetuate practices that fail to address certain key fronts, critics say.

    By Dec. 2, 2021
  • A detailed landscape design plan showing topographic contour lines, orange building illustrations, green trees, and directional arrows. The layout includes winding paths and clustered vegetation. A triangular scale ruler lies on the left, and three colored pencils, colored blue, green, and yellow, rest on the lower right corner of the page.
    Image attribution tooltip
    Getty Images
    Image attribution tooltip
    Column

    Ensuring equitable public safety responses in college towns

    In college towns across the United States, students run into many of the same dangers as the general public—traffic accidents, hit and runs, housing disasters and general crime.

    By Matthew J. Capaldi • Dec. 1, 2021
  • Public transportation bus in New York in Manhattan, New York
    Image attribution tooltip
    Getty Images
    Image attribution tooltip
    Q&A

    ‘The crossroads between climate and equity’: Advocates push for transit justice

    With the momentum of the just-passed bipartisan infrastructure bill and a growing emphasis on equity, advocates work toward building greater transit justice for underserved communities. 

    By Dec. 1, 2021
  • A detailed landscape design plan showing topographic contour lines, orange building illustrations, green trees, and directional arrows. The layout includes winding paths and clustered vegetation. A triangular scale ruler lies on the left, and three colored pencils, colored blue, green, and yellow, rest on the lower right corner of the page.
    Image attribution tooltip
    Getty Images
    Image attribution tooltip
    Column

    Report: Addressing climate change without driving up affordable housing costs will be a delicate balance

    Editor's note: This article was originally published in American City & County, which has merged with Smart Cities Dive to bring you expanded coverage of city innovation and local government. For the latest in smart city news, explore Smart Cities Dive or sign up for our newsletter.Los Angele...

    By Andy Castillo • Nov. 30, 2021
  • Transit leaders discuss urban mobility at an inflection point during the 2021 CoMotion LA conference.
    Image attribution tooltip
    Dan Zukowski/Smart Cities Dive
    Image attribution tooltip

    Transit leaders debate urban mobility myths ‘busted’ by the pandemic

    At the CoMotion LA conference last week, transportation leaders from Miami, Los Angeles and Vancouver reflected on how transit can better serve communities and where universal basic mobility could play a future role. 

    By Nov. 24, 2021
  • A detailed landscape design plan showing topographic contour lines, orange building illustrations, green trees, and directional arrows. The layout includes winding paths and clustered vegetation. A triangular scale ruler lies on the left, and three colored pencils, colored blue, green, and yellow, rest on the lower right corner of the page.
    Image attribution tooltip
    Getty Images
    Image attribution tooltip
    Opinion

    How local governments can better utilize text messages

    Editor's note: This article was originally published in American City & County, which has merged with Smart Cities Dive to bring you expanded coverage of city innovation and local government. For the latest in smart city news, explore Smart Cities Dive or sign up for our newsletter.For many p...

    By Tom Sheahan • Nov. 24, 2021
  • A detailed landscape design plan showing topographic contour lines, orange building illustrations, green trees, and directional arrows. The layout includes winding paths and clustered vegetation. A triangular scale ruler lies on the left, and three colored pencils, colored blue, green, and yellow, rest on the lower right corner of the page.
    Image attribution tooltip
    Getty Images
    Image attribution tooltip
    Column

    The new normal: How state and local governments can benefit from virtual desktop-as-a-service to support remote workforce

    The new normal: How state and local governments can benefit from virtual desktop-as-a-service to support remote workforce

    By Rick Rosenburg • Nov. 23, 2021
  • A detailed landscape design plan showing topographic contour lines, orange building illustrations, green trees, and directional arrows. The layout includes winding paths and clustered vegetation. A triangular scale ruler lies on the left, and three colored pencils, colored blue, green, and yellow, rest on the lower right corner of the page.
    Image attribution tooltip
    Getty Images
    Image attribution tooltip
    Column

    Local governments rely on taxes for revenue, but is that the best system for a modern society?

    Editor's note: This article was originally published in American City & County, which has merged with Smart Cities Dive to bring you expanded coverage of city innovation and local government. For the latest in smart city news, explore Smart Cities Dive or sign up for our newsletter.Over the l...

    By Andy Castillo • Nov. 23, 2021
  • A detailed landscape design plan showing topographic contour lines, orange building illustrations, green trees, and directional arrows. The layout includes winding paths and clustered vegetation. A triangular scale ruler lies on the left, and three colored pencils, colored blue, green, and yellow, rest on the lower right corner of the page.
    Image attribution tooltip
    Getty Images
    Image attribution tooltip
    Column

    Cost, flexibility prompting many U.S. cities to give BRT a second look

    A confluence of spiraling costs, rising environmental concerns and a huge influx of federal dollars is prompting government officials nationwide to give a public transportation option which has been with us since the early 1970s a second look.

    By Wes Guckert, PTP • Nov. 23, 2021
  • Reassessing the smart cities movement: Smart cities grapple with equity issues heightened by the pandemic
    Image attribution tooltip
    Adeline Kon/Smart Cities Dive
    Image attribution tooltip

    Smart cities grapple with equity issues heightened by the pandemic

    City leaders aim to help bridge the digital divide while providing better access to education, transportation, jobs and community engagement opportunities. 

    By Nov. 23, 2021