CONSULTING PLANNERS OF MASSACHUSETTS

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  • Tuesday, August 18, 2020 7:56 AM | Deleted user

    The public needs to take a lesson from the private sector and capitalize on the downturn in real estate in order to guarantee affordable housing.

    OPINION  By David M. Abromowitz

    We’ve been here in the real estate cycle before. In the early 1990s, a banking crisis combined with a real estate recession led to tens of thousands of rental units going into foreclosure. As the Resolution Trust Corporation began disposing $450 billion worth of real estate from collapsed savings banks, up for grabs was the fate of thousands of apartment buildings across the country.

    Despite advocates pressing to turn these assets into affordable rental housing, hurdles in the system resulted in relatively few properties increasing the supply of permanently affordable housing. Instead, cash-rich for-profit investors moved nimbly to buy apartments from the public at a deep discount and later flipped them for a significant profit. Tens of billions of dollars in public investment into failed savings loans could have been converted into meaningful housing stock, but the opportunity was largely missed.

    https://www.bostonglobe.com/2020/08/17/opinion/how-get-ahead-next-housing-downturn/


  • Wednesday, July 22, 2020 4:20 PM | Deleted user

    Read this  

    https://www.nytimes.com/2020/07/20/upshot/pandemic-city-planning-inequality.html?action=click&module=Spotlight&pgtype=Homepage

  • Wednesday, July 22, 2020 11:36 AM | Leonardi Aray (Administrator)

    Each spring, first-year Masters students in the Tufts Urban & Environmental Policy & Planning (UEP) must complete the Field Projects course, where students work in teams of 3-5 on projects hosted by real-world partners. We invite you to propose a project idea for the Spring 2021 Field Projects course.

    To submit a project idea, please email a brief (half-page to a page) description by September 8, 2020 to Penn Loh (penn.loh@tufts.edu). 

    Field Projects host doc 2021.pdf

    To see what past UEP Field Projects teams have accomplished, take a look at recent projects, which are posted online at: https://as.tufts.edu/uep/community/field-projects


  • Wednesday, July 22, 2020 11:27 AM | Leonardi Aray (Administrator)

    Making a place is not the same as designing and developing a building, public plaza, or even a commercial district. It is not just a physical place: it is a process whose purpose is to authentically satisfy people.

    https://artsfuse.org/206686/visual-arts-commentary-placemaking-thoughts-on-the-virus-and-our-current-public-environment/

    Mark Favermann, long time member of the Mass. Association of Consulting Planner

  • Thursday, July 02, 2020 11:42 AM | Daphne Politis (Administrator)

    "Across the country, Confederate monuments are tumbling. Museums are stripping effigies of racist presidents past. Here in Los Angeles, indigenous activists toppled a statue of Junipero Serra, a canonized saint who founded the mission system that enslaved and brutalized generations of California Indians into abandoning their traditions.

    The aftermath of George Floyd’s death while in police custody has created a moment for radical truth-telling. So here’s some ugly truth about the city of Los Angeles: Our freeway system is one of the most noxious monuments to racism and segregation in the country.

    Most Angelenos don’t think about it as we spew carbon monoxide across the city on our way from Point A to Point B, but our toxic exhaust fumes feed into a pot of racism that’s been stewing for nearly a century. To understand exactly how that works, you have to know what things were like here before freeways came to dominate L.A.’s landscape.

    Los Angeles was never a paradise of racial acceptance, but in 1910 some 36% of L.A.’s African Americans were homeowners (compared with 2.4% in New York City) — tops in the nation. L.A.’s comprehensive Red Car transit system, which offered easy, unsegregated access to the region’s growing economic opportunities, was fundamental to this success. Integrated, racially diverse neighborhoods like Watts and Boyle Heights emerged and thrived along these transit corridors.

    When the 1944 Federal-Aid Highway Act allocated funds for 1,938 miles of freeways in California, planners used the opportunity, with full federal support, to obliterate as much as possible the casual mingling of the races."

    https://www.latimes.com/opinion/story/2020-06-24/bulldoze-la-freeways-racism-monument

  • Monday, June 22, 2020 10:58 AM | Daphne Politis (Administrator)

    https://www.politico.com/news/2020/06/12/mass-evictions-314699

    A new tremor is threatening to shake minority communities as protests over racial injustice sweep the country: A wave of evictions as a federal moratorium on kicking people out of their rental units expires.

    The ban on evictions — which applies to rentals that are backed by the government — expires in a matter of weeks. On top of that, the federal boost to unemployment benefits that many laid-off workers have used to pay their rent is set to end July 31.

  • Wednesday, June 10, 2020 5:29 PM | Leonardi Aray (Administrator)

    ...the Seaport Neighborhood is anyplace USA, filled with rather charmless glass and polished metal high-rises that are nearly all at the same height...

    Mark Favermann, long time member of the Mass. Association of Consulting Planners. Check www.favermanndesign.com and read one of Mark's articles here:

    https://artsfuse.org/199110/book-review-the-art-of-classic-planning-how-to-build-beautiful-and-enduring-communities/

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