Urban Policy

Mark Paul

Senior Scholar

Mark Paul is an award-winning writer, editor, and policy expert with wide experience in journalism and California state government and politics. He covered California for 24 years, first as Editorial Page Editor and National Editor of the Oakland Tribune, then as Deputy Editorial Page Editor and columnist for… more

Can the City Save the Farm?

Even if you’re only the slightest bit familiar with California’s $30 billion-plus farm economy, you may have heard the lament: urban development is steamrolling the state’s agricultural belt. Every day, bountiful fields surrender to big-box stores, fast-food restaurants, and residential sprawl. More than 100,000 acres were paved over in the Central Valley alone in the 1990s, and experts estimate that nearly 1 million more could vanish within a generation. Today’s Country Mouse is tomorrow’s City Mouse (or, more likely, a… more

Rick Wartzman | California | May/June 2007

Katie Couric Interviews Joel Kotkin on American Cities for 10 Questions

At a time when American cities are changing so rapidly--both as centers of our society, as a launch pads for escape to suburbs and exurbs--I thought I'd consult with the man who may be the country's leading expert on urban life, Joel Kotkin, author and Irvine Senior Fellow at the New America Foundation. He’s the subject of this week’s 10 Questions. We talked about the problem with trendiness in cities, what it takes to make a well-managed city, and why… more

Joel Kotkin | May 17, 2007

Sun, Surf, Smog

Just in case you missed it, last week was National Air Quality Control Week. That explains why the American Lung Assn. released its new study announcing that Los Angeles is still the smog capitol of the United States.

Not exactly a man-bites-dog story, but some Angelenos may recall that we were actually stripped of that title a few years ago when the Environmental Protection Agency crowned Houston the new pollution king. For me, an asthmatic and no friend to smog, that… more

Pop-Up Cities

Three years ago, Alejandro Gutierrez got a strange and tantalizing message from Hong Kong. Some McKinsey consultants were putting together a business plan for a big client that wanted to build a small city on the outskirts of Shanghai. But the land, at the marshy eastern tip of a massive, mostly undeveloped island at the mouth of the Yangtze River, was a migratory stop for one of the rarest birds in the world -- the black-faced spoonbill, a gangly… more

Douglas McGray | Wired | May 2007

A Fertile Field in the Central Valley

Abdel Salem is hunched over a small aerial map in his office, divining the future.

"This is going to be new," he says, gesturing toward a blank spot that’s slated to be the site of 1,700 residences, a park and a school. His finger glides across the paper. "This is going to be new too," he adds, pointing to another vacant part of the map that’s poised for a burst of commercial construction. He stabs at the paper again. "And this… more

Rick Wartzman | Los Angeles Times | April 22, 2007

Mining Money Out of Downtown Space

Only a sap, it seems, would believe that you can pull money out of thin air.

But an interesting proposal is floating around L.A. that would, in effect, do just that -- and it might well work, raising meaningful sums for worthwhile aims such as affordable housing.

The basic idea is not too different from the city's move this month to sell 9 million square feet of unused "air rights" from over the Convention Center, easing the way for developers operating elsewhere… more

Rick Wartzman | Los Angeles Times | April 20, 2007

Suburban Idyll

No generation has lauded their revolutionary status more fervently than baby boomers. In documentaries, articles and books they are portrayed -- by themselves and others -- as agents of epochal change who, in the representative words of American University communications professor Leonard Steinhorn, have built "the inclusive, tolerant, free and equal America we have today."

Spoil sports may point out an older generation did the heavy lifting of surviving a depression, defeating the Nazis, overthrowing communism and launching the drive for… more

Vegas’ Next Act? Urban Reality

I realize now how fitting it is that the billionaire godfather of mainstream Las Vegas was an agoraphobe. Not unlike Howard Hughes barricading himself in his penthouse suite, on a midweek road trip to Vegas last week I only left my gigantic hotel complex once -- and that was to take a limousine ride to see a new monster project being built.

I mean, really, that hotel had every type of service you could imagine -- shopping, restaurants, entertainment of all… more

Going for Broke

In the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, which struck the Gulf Coast with such ferocity in late August 2005, Americans were shocked by the broadcast images of desperately poor people left to fend for themselves. The depth and consequences of poverty in America, normally hidden from public view, had once again become the subject of debate and national soul-searching. And yet, a year and a half later, the subject of poverty has fallen so far off the public’s radar screen that… more