People sitting at a bus stop in New York City by Susan Jane Golding licensed under Creative Commons.

An Urban Institute report found that many people lacking adequate transportation forego medical appointments. How porch culture could help solve the loneliness epidemic. The pandemic reduced interactions between people of different socioeconomic statuses in cities.

No transportation, no healthcare: A report from the Urban Institute found that one out of five people without access to transportation have foregone medical appointments because they could not get to the hospital or doctor’s office. Missed medical appointments have cost the healthcare industry $150 billion annually, so payers and providers have been increasing efforts to make sure people have adequate transportation to access care. (Shannon Muchmore | Smart Cities Dive)

Can porch culture solve loneliness?: This week, the US Surgeon General declared an epidemic of loneliness in the country saying that even before the pandemic, 50% of people felt lonely at some point. But one way to feel connected is through reaching out to neighbors and being out on your porch socializing. Porches used to be more mainstream, but air conditioning, televisions, and the automobile increasingly kept people further away from each other and coaxed people to stay indoors. (Sophie Hills | Mother Jones)

The pandemic reduced interactions: New research from MIT looking at where people visit in cities has found that diverse urban interactions have been reduced from anywhere between 15% and 30% by the pandemic in four cities. This means that people are less likely now to visit areas of the city that are socioeconomically different than their own. Researchers looked at anonymized cell phone data over a three-year period starting in 2019. (Peter Dizikes | MIT News)

10th anniversary of the CalEnviroScreen: California is celebrating the 10th anniversary of the CalEnviroScreen, a mapping system that pinpoints cumulative environmental impacts to communities and determines environmental justice funding. To date, the state has invested $6 billion in climate monies based on the mapping tool which pulls together indicators like air pollution, social vulnerability, asthma hospitalization, lead exposure, and more. (California EPA)

Walt Disney never wanted EPCOT residents: A fight between Florida’s governor and The Walt Disney Company has come to a head in recent months with lawsuits going back and forth over control of the land under Walt Disney World. The Experimental Prototype City of Tomorrow (EPCOT) was supposed to be Walt’s vision for urban development, but new information suggests that it might have been a ploy to control the property while not having any residents. (Molly Olmstead | Slate)

Quote of the Week

“[NFL Draft week] was one of the slowest weeks we’ve had all year, which was definitely a shock. We doubled our advertisements on Instagram. We made sure we were fully stocked and staffed, and it was a huge disappointment.”

Business owner Chanel Jezek in Startland News discussing reduced business during the NFL draft in Kansas City last week.

This week on the podcast, we’re joined by Trevor Latimer to talk about his book, Small Isn’t Beautiful: The Case Against Localism (Brookings).