Free Cities
Blog
As EV Sales Lag, California Cities Double Down on Charging Stations
As EV Sales Lag, California Cities Double Down on Charging Stations California leads the charge to switch from petroleum-guzzling vehicles to electric cars. Cities and counties are grappling with the many problems involved in setting up charging stations in single-family homes, multi-family units and separate charging stations in shopping centers. ...
John Seiler
March 21, 2025
Blog
Read the latest from PRI's Free Cities Center
Freedom v. efficiency: How automating driver’s licenses offers benefits, but creates some risks
Editor’s Note: In Part 1 of Serlet’s series on municipal automation, he looked at a generally unobjectionable use of AI technology: Chicago’s restaurant-inspection program. As he explained: There are countless mundane things that municipal governments do. These might include processing building permits, collecting residential taxes or distributing school supplies to ...
Thibault Serlet
March 18, 2025
Book
New Free Cities Book
New Book “The War on Suburbia” Challenges the Ideological Battle Against American Suburbs
SACRAMENTO – Acclaimed journalist and policy analyst Steven Greenhut released today his latest book, The War on Suburbia, a compelling examination of how urban planning, government policies, and ideological battles threaten the future of suburban living. Published by the Pacific Research Institute, this book offers a critical look at how policymakers, environmentalists, and urban ...
Steven Greenhut
March 17, 2025
Blog
Will cities’ transportation gravy train be derailed?
Will cities’ transportation gravy train be derailed? By D. Dowd Muska | March 14, 2025 Sept. 30, 2026, may seem far off to you and me. But for many politicians, contractor and activists, the date is just around the corner. Their livelihoods depend on favorable provisions in the mammoth, multi-year ...
D. Dowd Muska
March 14, 2025
Blog
Read the latest from PRI's Free Cities Center
Freedom v. efficiency: The benefits and dangers of automating municipal government services
There are countless mundane things that municipal governments do. These might include processing building permits, collecting residential taxes or distributing school supplies to needy families. Many of these services are provided inefficiently. They also require large expensive staffs. The rise of technologies such as artificial intelligence (AI) has created an ...
Thibault Serlet
March 10, 2025
Blog
Office conversions can help address L.A.’s housing shortage
Even before the pandemic, such adaptive-reuse efforts were taking place. Lately it’s become more relevant given the escalation in housing costs along with low inventory across the residential marketplace. The Los Angeles wildfires also have provided impetus for this idea. It’s better for the environment when one doesn’t have to ...
Sarah Downey
March 6, 2025
Blog
Rent controls will slow rebuilding L.A. from the wildfires
The Wall Street Journal talked to Richard Green, director of the University of Southern California’s Lusk Center for Real Estate. Restrictions he mentioned were California Coastal Commission restraints and the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA). And Proposition 13, the 1978 tax-limitation measure, left property as about the only area of ...
John Seiler
March 5, 2025
Blog
California’s latest insurance package will offer little relief
California’s latest insurance package will offer little relief California’s property insurance market has hobbled along for years, as insurers have slowly – then quickly – exited the market after years of massive wildfire losses have threatened their reserves. State officials have mostly blamed climate change, arguing that increased temperatures are ...
Steven Greenhut
February 28, 2025
Blog
Compton: cities learn wrong lessons from ‘free money’ program
Compton: cities learn wrong lessons from ‘free money’ program By Matthew Fleming | February 21, 2025 The results of the largest city-based experiment with what happens when low-income families receive free money from the government were just published and apparently nothing was learned. And nothing was learned because lovers of ...
Matthew Fleming
February 21, 2025
Blog
Read the latest from PRI's Free Cities Center
Read a sneak preview: Are urbanists right: Do cities subsidize the suburbs?
Urbanists often justify their anti-suburban policies based on a fairness issue. They argue that cities subsidize the suburbs and this shift of resources robs cities of their tax revenues and that leads to a decline in their quality of life. It’s odd for a movement that eagerly supports public subsidies ...
Steven Greenhut
February 20, 2025
As EV Sales Lag, California Cities Double Down on Charging Stations
As EV Sales Lag, California Cities Double Down on Charging Stations California leads the charge to switch from petroleum-guzzling vehicles to electric cars. Cities and counties are grappling with the many problems involved in setting up charging stations in single-family homes, multi-family units and separate charging stations in shopping centers. ...
Read the latest from PRI's Free Cities Center
Freedom v. efficiency: How automating driver’s licenses offers benefits, but creates some risks
Editor’s Note: In Part 1 of Serlet’s series on municipal automation, he looked at a generally unobjectionable use of AI technology: Chicago’s restaurant-inspection program. As he explained: There are countless mundane things that municipal governments do. These might include processing building permits, collecting residential taxes or distributing school supplies to ...
New Free Cities Book
New Book “The War on Suburbia” Challenges the Ideological Battle Against American Suburbs
SACRAMENTO – Acclaimed journalist and policy analyst Steven Greenhut released today his latest book, The War on Suburbia, a compelling examination of how urban planning, government policies, and ideological battles threaten the future of suburban living. Published by the Pacific Research Institute, this book offers a critical look at how policymakers, environmentalists, and urban ...
Will cities’ transportation gravy train be derailed?
Will cities’ transportation gravy train be derailed? By D. Dowd Muska | March 14, 2025 Sept. 30, 2026, may seem far off to you and me. But for many politicians, contractor and activists, the date is just around the corner. Their livelihoods depend on favorable provisions in the mammoth, multi-year ...
Read the latest from PRI's Free Cities Center
Freedom v. efficiency: The benefits and dangers of automating municipal government services
There are countless mundane things that municipal governments do. These might include processing building permits, collecting residential taxes or distributing school supplies to needy families. Many of these services are provided inefficiently. They also require large expensive staffs. The rise of technologies such as artificial intelligence (AI) has created an ...
Office conversions can help address L.A.’s housing shortage
Even before the pandemic, such adaptive-reuse efforts were taking place. Lately it’s become more relevant given the escalation in housing costs along with low inventory across the residential marketplace. The Los Angeles wildfires also have provided impetus for this idea. It’s better for the environment when one doesn’t have to ...
Rent controls will slow rebuilding L.A. from the wildfires
The Wall Street Journal talked to Richard Green, director of the University of Southern California’s Lusk Center for Real Estate. Restrictions he mentioned were California Coastal Commission restraints and the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA). And Proposition 13, the 1978 tax-limitation measure, left property as about the only area of ...
California’s latest insurance package will offer little relief
California’s latest insurance package will offer little relief California’s property insurance market has hobbled along for years, as insurers have slowly – then quickly – exited the market after years of massive wildfire losses have threatened their reserves. State officials have mostly blamed climate change, arguing that increased temperatures are ...
Compton: cities learn wrong lessons from ‘free money’ program
Compton: cities learn wrong lessons from ‘free money’ program By Matthew Fleming | February 21, 2025 The results of the largest city-based experiment with what happens when low-income families receive free money from the government were just published and apparently nothing was learned. And nothing was learned because lovers of ...
Read the latest from PRI's Free Cities Center
Read a sneak preview: Are urbanists right: Do cities subsidize the suburbs?
Urbanists often justify their anti-suburban policies based on a fairness issue. They argue that cities subsidize the suburbs and this shift of resources robs cities of their tax revenues and that leads to a decline in their quality of life. It’s odd for a movement that eagerly supports public subsidies ...