National Links: City Lists are Bunk

Every day, The Overhead Wire collects national and international news about cities and sends the links to their email list. At the end of the week they post some of the most popular stories to Greater Greater Washington, a group blog similar to Streets.mn that focuses on urban issues in the D.C. region.

Cleaner air from electric cars: New research using satellite data and remote sensing finds that the increase in electric cars in California has noticeably improved nitrogen pollution levels in neighborhoods. The study looked at 1,687 neighborhoods and found that the addition of 200 more zero emission vehicles in a neighborhood reduced emissions 1.1%. Data from the satellites was double checked using ground monitors as well. (Brian Silvestro | The Autopian)

City lists are bunk: Websites and businesses looking for easy media attention often create ranking lists such as “most livable city” or “safest”. These lists are often created using unlabeled data sources and suspect rating systems that don’t past a smell test. A better way of rating cities is using consistent datasets that allow for measuring a city against itself over the long term. (Jeff Asher | Jeff-alytics)

Advertisement

USDOT testing artificial intelligence for regulation writing: The Trump administration is hoping to rewrite regulations as fast as they can at USDOT using Google’s Gemini AI. Officials seemed more excited about the quantity of regulations that could be changed rather than the quality of changes. Opponents of using AI for work tied to safety regulations wonder why officials would leave such important decisions up to notoriously buggy technology that often gets things wrong. (Jesse Coburn | ProPublica)

LA Metro doesn’t want more riders: LA Metro’s board is opposing the implementation of SB 79, a new state law that if implemented would allow taller buildings near transit hubs. Metro staff and the board are afraid that NIMBYs will use the law to oppose new transit expansion projects. But advocates for the law believe the agency’s opposition to the law is self defeating as greater density around transit stations leads to greater ridership and support for system maintenance and expansion. (Damien Newton | Streetsblog LA)

This week on the Talking Headways podcast, Anna Zivarts guest hosts the show and guides a panel of elected officials and advocates (including Kai Hall) to talk about the impacts of the Week Without Driving. They look back at 2025’s activities and look forward to this year’s version.

Quote of the Day

Advertisement

“The cities weren’t really solving them, the states weren’t solving them, the federal government wasn’t doing anything, and people needed more and better housing… I was really interested in the ways in which people started working together to make a difference when governments and markets were failing.”

— Boston College Law Professor Lisa Alexander discussing in BC Law Magazine her work on tiny villages for homeless populations.

Advertisement
Jeff Wood

About Jeff Wood

Jeff Wood is an urban planner focused on transportation and land use issues living and working in the San Francisco Bay Area. Jeff's news archives can be found at The Overhead Wire and he tweets @theoverheadwire. You can also listen to his Talking Headways podcast episodes at Streetsblog USA