CityLab Daily
Also today: Chicago council delays $830 million bond vote amid scrutiny, and how Trump is fighting congestion pricing.
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Breaking: A federal judge declined to dismiss corruption charges against New York Mayor Eric Adams, instead ordering a probe of the law governing the Trump Justice Department’s move to drop the case. Read more here.

Today’s newsletter comes from Magdalena del Valle:

Long treated like a political football, California’s now-$128 billion high-speed rail project is under threat yet again. Its fate has been contingent on which president is occupying the White House, and now the Trump administration has launched a review of the venture — which is plagued by cost overruns and delays.

The investigation by the the Federal Railroad Administration will only add to doubts over the project’s eventual completion. In 2008, the California High-Speed Rail Authority said it was supposed to cost $33 billion and begin service by 2020. But so far, only 119 miles of the planned 776-mile railroad have commenced construction, and the estimated cost has soared, Maxwell Adler reports. Today on CityLab: Trump Targets $128 Billion California High-Speed Rail Project

More on CityLab

Chicago Council Delays $830 Million Bond Vote Amid Scrutiny
The council postponed a vote on Mayor Brandon Johnson’s bond proposal, which would put off principal payments for two decades.

How Trump Is Trying to Eliminate New York’s Congestion Pricing
Whether the president has the legal right to end the program is likely to be decided in court.

NYC’s Adams Will Stay in Office as Hochul Plans ‘Guardrails’
Governor Kathy Hochul said she doesn’t plan to remove embattled New York City Mayor Eric Adams for now but will take steps to curb his power. 

What we’re reading

  • Trump’s attempt to kill congestion pricing will backfire (Slate)

  • In-office work at highest level since 2020, as companies pull back on remote (Washington Post)

  • The Nuns Trying to Save the Women on Texas’s Death Row (New Yorker)

  • Dying to serve: Dozens of recruits have died nationwide while training to become police officers (Associated Press)

  • For Thousands of workers, the U.S.-Mexico border is just a commute (Wall Street Journal)


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