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Also today: Trump targets housing aid for immigrants for cuts, and not even money can buy AC in London as city bakes.
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For the next few years, New York City will be just about the only place you’ll stand a good chance of spotting (and perhaps riding in) a Fisker Ocean, a luxury electric SUV whose manufacturer was once poised to take on Tesla — until it declared bankruptcy in 2024. The city’s largest fleet operator, American Lease, acquired about 2,800 unsold Ocean SUVs to lease to ride-hailing drivers, ahead of the 2030 deadline for a mandate requiring all Uber and Lyft rides in NYC to be either wheelchair-accessible or zero-emission. 

The model has a sleek design and lots of unique features, including a solar roof. But drivers are also dealing with some of the gremlins that helped doom the fledgling automaker, with lights that randomly come on, glitchy gadgets, and gears that can shift into park suddenly. Fixing the Ocean’s buggy software has been an ongoing challenge. But at just $16,000 per car — a fraction of the price of a mainstream EV — American Lease said they’re willing to take a chance, Raphael Orlove reports. Today on CityLabWhy New York City Has a Fleet of New EVs From a Dead Carmaker

— Arvelisse Bonilla Ramos

More on CityLab

Trump Takes Second Swing at Cutting Housing Assistance for Immigrants
A pending HUD rule change targeting aid for families with undocumented members revisits an idea that housing advocates fought off in Trump’s first term.

Chicago Schools Seeks $1 Billion of Short-Term Debt as Cash Gone
A delay in local property tax bills is worsening Chicago Public Schools’ cash crunch, leading the junk-rated district to rely more on short-term borrowing.

Rich Londoners Find Money Can’t Buy ACs As Temperatures Soar
Obstacles to getting air conditioning installed include technical or aesthetic restrictions on attaching units to old buildings, and councils rejecting claims of overheating.

What we’re reading

  • The founders of this new development say you must be white to live there (New York Times)

  • This Bay Area city bet on warehouses over tech offices. Here’s why it paid off (San Francisco Chronicle)

  • National park visitors are not keen on Donald Trump’s effort to sanitize history (Mother Jones)

  • Confusion reigns as Texas colleges scramble to comply with ban on in-state tuition for undocumented students (Texas Tribune)

  • Rice, two curries and dal: The Indian cafes where you can pay in bundles of plastic waste (BBC)


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