Hampden Park Co-Op, St. Paul, Minnesota by Tony Webster licensed under Creative Commons.

Minnesota’s grocery co-ops stem from and support local communities. Is infrastructure the best way to fight a coronavirus recession? The new executive director of Denver’s Community Planning and Development Department brings a global perspective to city-building.

50 years of Minnesota’s grocery activism: Minnesota’s Cooperative Grocers network has more than 50 food co-ops listed, more than twice as many as California. Minnesota’s countercultural activists of the 1970s promoted a new ecological consciousness, participatory democracy, and sustainable local economies, thus leading to the creation of the co-op. (Craig Upright | City Pages)

Fighting COVID-19 recession with infrastructure: With the economy shut down as the nation increasingly shelters in place, fiscal policy alone is not enough to counter a coronavirus recession. The best way to fight it is developing the nation’s infrastructure, from improving broadband access to expanding the energy grid. (Shai Kivity | World Economic Forum)

Bringing beauty to Denver’s streets: Laura Aldrete stepped in as executive director of Denver’s Community Planning and Development Department in a time of unprecedented growth. With a background in cultural anthropology and urban planning, she brings a global perspective to city-building which includes economic development, climate resilience, equity, and affordability. (Kasey Cordell | 5280)

Coronavirus is exposing Airbnb: Landlords worldwide are suddenly losing large sources of income as travelers cancel their short-term rentals. While the Internet has been quick to empathize with other industries hit by coronavirus losses, responses to Airbnb and landlords who use the platform were not as warm. (Olga Lexell | Daily Dot)

Is the coronavirus accelerating automation: With a coronavirus recession worsening an economy driven majorly by in-person jobs, informal work, and under-employment, the future of many jobs is at a crossroads. Because of new innovations such as open-source furniture, which you can 3D print yourself, or brick-laying robots, we could be on the verge of human-free production and construction. (Fabian Dejtiar | ArchDaily)

Quote of the Week

“If there is a lesson to be learned, it is this: the aftermath of calamity is dangerous too. We must all be vigilant; a sickness of the body can also poison the mind of the body politic.”

Miri Rubin in The Conversation discussing the aftermath of plague and famine in Europe during the middle ages.

This week on the podcast, Lindiwe Rennert of Boston’s Department of Transportation talks about transit priority on Warren Street in Boston.