Ann Arbor Axes Parking Minimums. In Michigan, That’s Huge.
The city of Ann Arbor officially abolished parking minimums yesterday with the passage of an amendment to the city’s development
Read MoreThe city of Ann Arbor officially abolished parking minimums yesterday with the passage of an amendment to the city’s development
Read MoreA new book looks at the militarization of police forces in the United States, how it costs taxpayers a staggering amount of money, threatens American democracy, and, above all else, doesn’t actually do much to reduce crime.
Read MoreIf you, like me, are a part-time transplant resident of the District of Columbia– and are a policy nerd, no
Read MoreWhile I was glad to ditch my personal car in August, our household has a new-used car, which we were
Read MoreRepresentatives of Michigan’s Department of Transportation have, at two recent public meetings, firmly pushed back on the proposal that the agency must tie a reduction in vehicle miles traveled (VMT) to funding considerations for new projects– using a dubious rationale.
Read MoreToo much regulation restricts innovation. But too little regulation does the same, and this is what we see in the crumbling infrastructure of Michigan, where regulators are asleep at the wheel in the name of a “business-friendly regulatory” environment that, as it turns out, is neither terribly regulatory nor terribly business-friendly.
Read MoreWalking from home to Corktown last night in search of food and drink with some out-of-town visitors who were eager
Read MoreWe revisited our previous analysis trying to correlate red state regressivism with corporate investment, but this time looking at California’s newly-amended ban on state-funded travel to a number of deep red states.
Read MoreThe Supreme Court’s recent announcement that it will hear a case about draconian abortion restrictions in Mississippi led me to
Read MoreAn academic paper looks at the Detroit Community Benefits Ordinance, or CBO. Conclusions? It’s had mixed success. We can get beyond this if we stop thinking about public policy in the simplistic terms of “pro” or “anti” development.
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