I write about housing, transportation, agriculture, and climate for The New York Times, Texas Monthly, and Bloomberg’s CityLab, among other outlets. Here are some recent stories I’ve written:
Can a ‘Smart Highway’ in Texas Pave the Way to Self-Driving?, Bloomberg, March 25, 2024
The tech company Cavnue says that its sensor-equipped “autonomous freight corridor” outside of Austin will help usher in a future full of driverless trucks.
Houston Evictions Are Skyrocketing. One Court Is Testing a Solution. Texas Monthly, January 10, 2024
Last year, one in every ten Harris County renters faced losing their home. A new program aims to connect tenants with resources.
The New Generation of Freeway Fighters Is Assembling, Bloomberg, November 15, 2023
Foes of US highway expansions, fueled by environmental and equity concerns, gathered at a summit to share strategy, compare notes and try to forge a national movement.
A Regional Government Faces Calls for Reform in Houston, Bloomberg, October 26, 2023
Voters are weighing changes to the Houston-Galveston Area Council, a planning organization that’s been at odds with the city over freeway and flood recovery funds.
In Red-Hot Austin, Climate Fears Can’t Stop a $4.5 Billion Highway Expansion, Bloomberg, September 29, 2023
The long-planned project to widen Interstate 35 through the booming Texas capital is racing ahead, despite years of opposition from environmental advocates.
A Highway That Doesn’t Exist Is Strangling a Black Neighborhood, Bloomberg, February 17, 2023
In the Louisiana city of Shreveport, residents of Allendale have spent decades fighting a highway expansion. Even if they succeed, the neighborhood is already losing.
Why Bringing More Affordable Housing to Austin is a Block-by-Block Battle, Texas Monthly, September 15, 2022
A recent neighborhood fight demonstrates how the outsized influence of existing homeowners restricts supply in a city that badly needs 135,000 new homes.
Can Anacostia Build a Bridge Without Displacing Its People?, The New York Times, August 9, 2022
A decade in the works, the 11th Street Bridge Park in Washington, D.C., has yet to be built. But it could be a model for how to create public space while lessening the effects of gentrification.
Desperate for Housing, Austin Seeks Relief in Rezoning, Bloomberg, April 29, 2022
The booming Texas capital’s efforts to revise its land development code and build more affordable housing have been thwarted by protests from homeowners.
The Great Springs Project Aims to Build a 100-Mile Hike-and-Bike Trail From Austin to San Antonio, Texas Monthly, April 11, 2022
The nonprofit effort will cost hundreds of millions and preserve 50,000 acres over the fragile Edwards Aquifer. Can it be done?
Writing Love Letters Can Give Home Buyers An Edge—And Open the Door to Discrimination, Texas Monthly, August 31, 2021
As home prices skyrocket in Texas, buyers will try anything to stand out, and neuroscience shows these letters work. But housing experts say the implications are troubling.
The CDC Halted Evictions. Texas Judges Are Proceeding Anyway, Texas Observer, August 16, 2021
Despite federal protections aimed at preventing eviction, thousands of tenants in Texas have been unable to use them to keep their homes.
The Road Home, Texas Observer / The Nation, July/August 2021
The Texas Department of Transportation intends to spend $25 billion widening highways to fix traffic in Texas cities. What if we tore them down instead?
In Houston, A Plan to Expand Interstate 45 Encounters Federal Pushback, Texas Observer, March 29, 2021
For years, community groups have been organizing to stop a massive highway expansion. In March, the federal government paused the project, citing serious civil rights concerns.
The Blacklist, Texas Observer, November/December 2020
Screened out by automated background checks, tenants who face eviction can be denied housing for years to come.
Texas Landlords Are Filing Hundreds of Illegal Evictions, Texas Observer, June 24, 2020
As courts reopen in Harris County, tenants may be removed from their homes as COVID-19 cases skyrocket, despite CARES Act protections that guarantee shelter.
If You Can Buy It, By All Means Do That, Texas Observer, June 3, 2020
Five years ago, facing significant rent increases and, in some cases, eviction, residents at the North Lamar Mobile Home Park organized. Now, they own the park.
Building Trust, Texas Observer, March/April 2020
As Texans face the skyrocketing cost of housing, community land trusts offer the promise of permanent affordability. You just have to give up ownership of your land. March|April 2020
The Fight to Make Austin Affordable, Texas Observer, December 6, 2019
Austin is one of the most segregated and sprawling cities in Texas. A new land development code aims to change that.
Tiny home communities: housing solution or gentrified trailer parks? The Guardian, June 26, 2018
Like many US cities, Austin is facing an affordable-housing crisis. Can the burgeoning Instagram- and tech-friendly tiny home movement help solve it?