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Also today: How cities can stage a tourist comeback after disasters, and why Florida’s governor wants to kill property taxes.
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Laments against speed and red-light cameras in the local news may suggest that Americans overwhelmingly hate automated traffic enforcement — but that’s not true. Rather, surveys have found broad public support for installing more cameras, in large part because they work, argues contributor David Zipper. 

Studies show they’re effective at reducing crashes and deterring dangerous driving behavior. Cameras can help enforce all kinds of traffic laws beyond speed limits, like requiring cars to stop for a school bus offloading kids. They also have added benefits over police enforcement, which can often be biased or escalate into violence. That’s not to say that some camera deployments haven’t been problematic, but as Zipper writes, “the common assumption that traffic cameras are widely despised is based on vibes rather than data.” Today on CityLab: Automated Traffic Enforcement Is More Popular Than You Think

— Linda Poon

More on CityLab

After Disasters, Cities Race to Rescue Tourism. Here’s the Playbook.
In the wake of wildfires, storms and human-caused cataclysms, state and local visitors bureaus step in to protect the brand and stage the tourist comeback. 

Amtrak Debuts New High-Speed Acela Trains After Years of Delays
The NextGen Acelas linking cities along the Northeast Corridor can reach higher speeds and can carry more passengers per trip.

DeSantis Unleashes ‘Florida DOGE’ in Quest to Kill Property Taxes
Florida’s governor is seeking to complete his project of remaking the state into a conservative paradise with perhaps his riskiest wager yet.

What we’re reading

  • Local officials have a powerful tool to warn residents of emergencies. They don’t always use it (ProPublica)

  • 'No public lands are safe': Trump USDA moves forward with gutting roadless rule (Common Dreams)

  • Elon Musk is trying to build $760M tunnels under Houston. A Texas congressman is quietly helping him (KUT News/ProPublica/Houston Chronicle/Texas Tribune)

  • Chicago has the most lead pipes in the nation. We mapped them all (Grist)

  • Amid growing climate threat, Vietnam’s architects turn to tradition (CNN)


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