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Also today: The architects who built Miami, and reviving a little-known Buffalo landmark.
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Water workers — the often-invisible employees who ensure Americans have clean tap water and working sewer systems — are getting harder to come by. Many of the roughly 1.7 million people employed in the water sector have hit or are nearing retirement age, and there aren’t enough younger workers in the pipeline to replace them.

Labor shortages like these are just one of the many threats to the US drinking water supply. They’re also one of a number of hiring challenges localities face. Read more from Kendra Pierre-Louis today on CityLab: America’s Next Water Crisis? A Lack of Experienced Workers

—  Magdalena del Valle

More on CityLab

The Architects Who Built Miami
Fourteen of Miami’s 50 tallest buildings were designed by Arquitectonica, a firm whose aesthetic has become synonymous with the city’s image.

Reviving a Little-Known Modernist Landmark in Buffalo
The home and studio of pioneering African American architect Robert Traynham Coles is the focus of a preservation effort that aims to create a new community hub. 

New York’s Congestion Pricing Faces Key Legal Hurdles
The program to charge drivers entering certain parts of Manhattan is slated to start Jan. 5. But several pending lawsuits may stand in the way. 

China’s Struggling Rich Cities Are Threatening the Entire Economy
Fiscal hardship gripping poorer provinces is spilling into wealthy regions long considered slowdown-proof. 

Mexico City avoided all-out drought

"People cannot have water day and night, day and night because it’s a resource that we now see is not infinite."
Juan Manuel González
Emergency response specialist at the water authority Conagua
"Day zero" was looming in Mexico City earlier this year, but just-in-time rain and the presidential election helped thwart a potential disaster.

What we’re reading

  • Mind the labour gap: Worker crunch piles pressure on small-town Japan (Reuters)

  • The design trend taking over rural America (New York Times)

  • Drones spotted on America’s east coast highlight a bigger problem (Economist)

  • Overdoses plague a generation of Black men in Baltimore and cities across America (Baltimore Banner)

  • Landlords use pricing software that adds billions to rental costs, White House says (Axios)


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