Also today: EV charging infrastructure zooms ahead despite Trump, and how overtourism in Peru’s Rainbow Mountain led to murder. |
|
In the world’s richest nation, the share of households living without access to clean running water is growing — and urban areas are at the center of the crisis. That marks a significant change from decades ago, when “plumbing poverty,” as researchers call it, was endemic to rural America. The rise of housing unaffordability and living costs began shifting the issue to cities in the 1990s. Today, nearly three-quarters of households lacking running water live in metropolitan areas, with wealthy places like Portland, Oregon; Houston and Phoenix seeing some of the largest surges in recent years. Utility shut-offs due to nonpayment or improper maintenance by landlords are the main factors behind the problem, Laura Bliss and Klara Auerbach report. Today in Businessweek: Why Access to Running Water Is a Luxury in Wealthy US Cities — Linda Poon | |
|
|
Trump pulls funding for "train to nowhere" | | |
- Metro's ridership in June dropped to lowest of the year after immigration raids (Los Angeles Times)
-
The secret to Baltimore's extraordinary year (Popular Information) -
GOP reshapes opportunity zones to target Trump country (Wall Street Journal) -
Who made the giant Elon Musk head spotted at Arches National Park? (Outside) -
These new building materials are alive, photosynthetic — and carbon hungry (Anthropocene) | |
Have something to share? Email us. And if you haven’t yet signed up for this newsletter, please do so here. | |
|
|
You received this message because you are subscribed to Bloomberg's CityLab Daily newsletter. If a friend forwarded you this message, sign up here to get it in your inbox. | | |