Urban Edge
Here’s what our cities will look like after the coronavirus pandemic
Editor’s note: This is the first of two posts exploring the long-term effects the COVID-19 crisis will have on the American city. Once we get through this, cities as we know them will be changed forever.
During the pandemic, we can keep our distance while looking after one another
As a stay-at-home order takes effect for residents of Houston and Harris County, the importance of social solidarity and working together for the common good become even more crucial to protecting our most vulnerable neighbors.
Suspending evictions is the right move for Census 2020
Thursday, in response to the COVID-19 outbreak, the Texas Supreme Court halted eviction proceedings until April 19. This is the right call. With an average of 600 evictions per week in Harris County, suspending evictions will prevent thousands of people from losing their homes over the next month.
Cities and coronavirus: Some thoughts
The Coronavirus pandemic is already worse in several American states than anywhere in China outside Hubei Province. The pandemic is all about geography, and we need to do more to pinpoint hotspots and contagion. The very thing that makes cities special–their ability to bring people together–is their kryptonite in the Coronavirus pandemic.
Report: Texas moves to No. 39 on list of most aggressive states in combating COVID-19 (update)
The state, which ranks 31st in population density, has moved up to No. 38 in tested cases of COVID-19 per capita — it was previously last. It remains 48th in total public health emergency preparedness funding per capita.
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