February 18, 2023
Urban Scholar Highlight: Melanie Malone
This is the second in a series of interviews from Urban@UW highlighting the research of urban scholars at the University of Washington. Urban@UW spoke to Melanie Malone, Assistant Professor in the School of Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences at the University of Washington Bothell. The interview has been edited for length and clarity. What do…
Advocacy & Civic Engagement | Diversity, Equity & Justice | Health & Well Being | Natural Resources & Environment | Water
February 14, 2023
Google’s exit from big Seattle-area project shows fleeting relationship between tech and communities
The City of Kirkland was counting on Google to be the “catalyst project” in its proposed Station Area Plan, a reimagining of the area around a planned rapid transit bus station into a higher density community of housing and businesses. But suddenly and without warning, the plans evaporated last month. The City of Kirkland issued…
Economy & Development | Infrastructure & Transportation | Land Use & Planning
February 10, 2023
There are 4,000 racist housing covenants in Pierce County. You can find them on a map
Professor of history James Gregory knows the subject well. For roughly two decades, he’s been unearthing the ugly, racist underpinnings of racial disparities in wealth and homeownership seen to this day across Puget Sound. For Gregory, it started in 2005, when he first began to dig into discriminatory housing covenants in Seattle and later King…
Advocacy & Civic Engagement | Diversity, Equity & Justice | History & Preservation | Housing & Homelessness | Policy & Law
February 9, 2023
Rising rents are drowning Washington’s smaller cities
While Seattle may have the highest rents statewide, the most drastic percentage increases over the past four to five years are in smaller cities and rural areas. And affordability is not an issue just for the poor but across different income levels. Median gross rent in Washington was nearly $1,500 in 2021, ranking it among…
February 7, 2023
582,462 and Counting
Last year, the Biden administration laid out a goal to reduce homelessness by 25 percent by 2025. The problem increasingly animates local politics, with ambitious programs to build affordable housing getting opposition from homeowners who say they want encampments gone but for the solution to be far from their communities. Across the country, homelessness is…
Economy & Development | Housing & Homelessness | Policy & Law
February 6, 2023
RAC announces Request for Applications
Urban@UW is excited to announce the Request for Applications (RFA) for the Research to Action Collaboratory (RAC). The RFA invites teams of community members, researchers and students across the University of Washington who are excited to co-produce actionable, community-centered research and knowledge for persistent urban-focused problems. The deadline for submitting an application is Friday, March…
February 3, 2023
Group’s lawsuit seeks to void Washington transportation law
A conservative legal advocacy organization is suing to halt the nearly $17 billion transportation funding bill passed by the Washington Legislature and signed by Gov. Jay Inslee last year. Senate Bill 5974, known as Move Ahead Washington, passed last session despite opposition from most Republicans. The legislation pays for finishing massive highway projects and pays…
Infrastructure & Transportation | Policy & Law
February 1, 2023
Planting more trees in cities could slash summer heat deaths, study finds
Planting more trees in cities could cut the number of people dying from high temperatures in summer, according to a study published in the Lancet medical journal on Tuesday, a strategy that could help mitigate the effects of climate change as it continues to drive temperatures upwards. The research identifies a way for city planners…
Climate & Energy | Health & Well Being | Infrastructure & Transportation | Natural Hazards
January 26, 2023
Hospitals send performance reports to cut greenhouse gas use in anesthesia
At Massachusetts General Hospital, anesthesiologist Dr. Sam Smith co-founded a committee to discuss changes for the anesthesiology department as a whole. Nurse anesthetists and anesthesiologists were already getting monthly performance reports that showed how well they avoided low blood pressures during surgery and postoperative nausea. Now, they also see two climate assessments: The global warming…
Climate & Energy | Education | Health & Well Being | Innovation & Technology
January 24, 2023
Big Green School Bus
Hop in an Uber these days, and you’ll likely find yourself in a quiet, fuel-efficient hybrid vehicle. But millions of children are still riding to school in buses belching diesel fumes, a fuel more closely associated with a prior generation of tractor-trailer trucks. Maggie Polachek, graduate of the Foster School of Business, is working to…
Climate & Energy | Education | Health & Well Being | Natural Resources & Environment