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The Fall issue answers some of the planning profession’s most pressing questions around equitable disaster recovery, housing affordability innovations, and mobility justice. Meanwhile, Planning highlights five planners-turned-politicians — and how they’re addressing these issues in their own communities. PLUS: One of Washington’s fastest-growing rural cities embraces zoning reform, car-free streets go viral on Twitter, and how living shorelines can reclaim and protect vulnerable regions. 


Details

Page Count
48
Date Published
Oct. 1, 2022
Format
Adobe PDF
Publisher
American Planning Association National

Table of Contents

Zoning's Future

A small town in Washington reformed its local code in 2018 to promote housing diversity and respond to a shortage. How are they faring now? PLUS: Zoning History in America

Planner Politicians

Five planners discuss their shift to local and state politics — and the ways their education and experience in the profession set them apart.

Power Failure

A decade after Hurricane Sandy, mitigation and recovery policies still fail to protect the most vulnerable. Two New York City planners lay out what happened and what needs to change. PLUS: A Superstorm and Its Lasting Impacts.

INTERSECTIONS

Infrastructure: Federal funding for highway remediation.

People Behind The Plans: Transportation innovator Naomi Doerner on mobility justice.

Housing: An affordability strategy from Boise.

Et Cetera: New York City transit documentary, national zoning map, local government podcast.

TOOLS FOR THE TRADE

Climate: Inland town prepares for climate migration.

Tech: AI-generated streets take Twitter.

How-To: 4 tips for regulating shortterm rentals.

ALSO IN THIS ISSUE

Contributors

Perspectives: AICP guides emerging planners.

Letters

Community Green: A living shoreline protects Jamaica Bay in Queens.