Will Climate Migration Reshape America?
All the city news you can use.
Every day at The Overhead Wire we sort through over 1,500 news items about cities and share the best ones with our email list. At the end of the week, we take some of the most popular stories and share them with Urban Milwaukee readers. They are national (or international) links, sometimes entertaining and sometimes absurd, but hopefully useful.
Climate migration will reshape America: As climate change continues unabated, millions of Americans could be forced to leave where they live because of extreme heat, more severe weather events, and increasing numbers of megafires. These events will not only destroy housing, impact crime rates and the food supply, they will also increase stress on communities that do not have the resources to move. (Abrahm Lustgarten | New York Times)
Life under Tokyo’s elevated train tracks: In many cities in the west, the land and property underneath railways is considered undesirable, dark, and dangerous. But Tokyo Japan has embraced the spaces and redefined their functionality with restaurants, shops, and productive spaces. Limited space in the city meant elevated railways were built with an intention of leaving usable space underneath for economic activity and now are part of the character of the area. (Max Zimmerman | Bloomberg CityLab)
A prototype for a new SRO: Single room occupancy (SRO) housing is slowly disappearing across the country as housing markets heat up. But in Portland Oregon, a newly opened development called Argyle Gardens hopes to provide an example of community oriented affordable housing that can help bridge the gap between homelessness and traditional apartments. The units are prefabricated to reduce construction costs and were built as four buildings instead of one large monolithic structure. (Brian Libby | Metropolis Magazine)
Voters to decide on merger of shrinking cities: Three cities on the Illinois side of the Mississippi River next to St. Louis are quickly losing residents and those that remain will decide in November whether they wish to merge into one municipality. A large percentage in all of the communities live below the Federal poverty line and since the allocation of federal dollars for public services are closely tied to the population of cities, merging could facilitate aid and boost local economies. (Deasia Paige | Belleville News Democrat)
Quote of the Week
We’re not saying don’t sell. We’re not saying don’t entertain. But we’re saying make sure you educate yourself.
–Tia McCoy in WABE NPR talking about her meetings educating older homeowners in Atlanta about the dangers of speculators preying on them.
This week on the podcast, we chat with the Port Authority’s David Huffaker about how Pittsburgh transit is dealing with the pandemic.
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