CityLab Daily
Also today: Aging subway fleet adds to NYC's transit woes, and an explainer on the deadly riots in Kathmandu, Nepal.
View in browser
Bloomberg

When President Donald Trump expanded federal operations in Washington, DC, nearly 30 days ago under a “crime emergency,” residents swiftly began recording arrests of suspected undocumented immigrants on their phones and warning others of traffic checkpoints through apps like Instagram. These are techniques that community patrol groups in Los Angeles have been using for months: A wide range of messaging services, tech tools and social media sites have been enlisted to track immigration enforcement activity in Southern California. For immigrant neighborhoods, these platforms have become vital news sources and alert systems.

Citizen monitoring is likely to grow as Trump ramps up his immigration crackdown in other cities. But while recording police and other public officials is protected by the US Constitution, experts worry about the limitations of those protections, as the administration has said that filming or documenting agents at work threatens their safety. The line between observing federal activity and obstructing agents — which is a crime — is murky, contributor Patrick Sisson reports. Today on CityLab: As Immigration Crackdown Expands, Citizen Activists Observe and Report

— Linda Poon

More on CityLab

Santa Monica Weighs Fiscal Distress Vote Amid Abuse Settlements
The city has paid over $229 million in settlements and has 180 claims pending in court.

New York City’s Transit Woes Worsen With Aging Subway Fleet
About one quarter of the city’s subway trains are at or beyond their 40-year useful life, according to a new report.

What’s Behind the Deadly Riots That Brought Down Nepal’s Prime Minister?
Protesters set government buildings on fire, demanding an end to endemic corruption and greater employment opportunities for the country’s sizable young population.

What we’re reading

  • First came the wildfire. Then came the scams (Grist)

  • A tour of the sound and heat hellscape that is LA (Los Angeles Times)

  • Plane to purgatory: how Trump’s deportation program shuttles immigrants into lawless limbo (Guardian)

  • Traffic cameras double as a hurricane-response system in this South Carolina county (Smart Cities Dive

  • How Seoul Metro installed platform screen doors everywhere (S(ubstack)-Bahn)


Have something to share? Email us. And if you haven’t yet signed up for this newsletter, please do so here.

More from Bloomberg

  • Green Daily for the latest in climate news, zero-emission tech and green finance
  • Hyperdrive for expert insight into the future of cars
  • Design Edition for CityLab’s newsletter on design and architecture — and the people who make buildings happen
  • Management & Work analyzes trends in leadership, company culture and the art of career building
  • Nordic Edition for sharp analysis and new perspectives on the forces shaping business and finance in the Nordic region

Explore all Bloomberg newsletters.

Follow Us

Like getting this newsletter? Subscribe to Bloomberg.com for unlimited access to trusted, data-driven journalism and subscriber-only insights.
 

Want to sponsor this newsletter? Get in touch 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.
Unsubscribe
Bloomberg.com
Contact Us
Bloomberg L.P.
731 Lexington Avenue,
New York, NY 10022
Ads Powered By Liveintent Ad Choices