An Austin Zoning Technicality Made His Landscaping Business Illegal Overnight
Brandon Krause has spent $30,000 trying to legalize a business that the city said for years was all up to code.
Brandon Krause has spent $30,000 trying to legalize a business that the city said for years was all up to code.
The comedian doesn’t want a new subdivision behind his house. Fortunately, he can’t stop it.
How the zeal for government project housing killed a prosperous black community in Detroit.
"Every house that's built is one more acre taken away from (mountain lions') habitat. Where are they going to go?" asks Woodside Mayor Dick Brown.
A pastor and a nonprofit challenge occupational licensing rules.
St. Timothy's Episcopal Church says that a Brookings, Oregon, law limiting its "benevolent meal service" to two days a week unconstitutionally restricts its religious mission to feed the hungry.
Despite shifting enforcement away from cops, NYC is still ticketing the dickens out of New York's street-food sellers.
Those who demand a revival of antitrust regulation to "promote competition" may not realize that they're inciting a revival of cronyism to suppress competition.
The city's restrictions threaten one of the world's most vibrant music scenes.
Long before the pandemic, millions of students were completing their education at home. I was one of them.
Plus: A free speech win for Florida professors, why Dutch museums are becoming hair salons, and more...
"We can't even do the things we want to on our own property that aren't even hurting anyone."
Legislators on a crusade against monopolies should tackle occupational licensing boards before they target Big Tech.
Remy can’t shake off his distaste for San Francisco NIMBYs
Plus: CBD could prevent COVID-19, gun owner privacy is at risk in California, and more...
In the name of fostering innovation and choice, the bill would accomplish neither.
The New York congresswoman has endorsed much-needed zoning reform, but also raised typical NIMBY complaints about projects in her own backyard.
The latest from Paul Alan Levy (Public Citizen), pushing back against threats of trademark litigation over parody.
Gloversville's Free Methodist Church has 40 beds ready and waiting at its downtown shelter. City officials say the zoning code doesn't allow people to sleep in them.
The San Fransicko author on fighting homelessness and mental illnesses without shredding civil liberties.
The traditional case for rent control isn't made any more convincing by a Democratic Socialists of America dance number.
Federal subsidies for higher education lead to market distortions that affect financially needy students.
Plus: Warren versus grocery stores, Cruz versus the FBI, DOJ's new domestic terror unit, why so many people are quitting their jobs, and more...
The Golden State's legalization of accessory dwelling units has produced a glut of new housing. New York area policymakers are trying to replicate the success.
Defenders of the CDC eviction moratorium predicted a "tsunami" of evictions would happen if the policy were rescinded. That hasn't happened.
Local ordinances threaten upstart crypto-mining operations.
Zoning officials concede Robert Balitierrez's drive-thru window isn't causing any problems. But they say it's a code violation and has to close anyway.
I was just reminded of this short article of mine (published at 8 Tex. Rev. L. & Pol. 259 (2003)), and I thought I’d repost it here.
Politicians point to corporate concentration they created to divert us from inflation they caused.
Distillers have been granted emergency regulatory relief—for now.
For decades, libertarians have focused on illiberalism coming from the political left. But authoritarianism has taken root among many conservatives across the world.
Jurisdictions around the world are trying to address high housing costs by eliminating regulations on new housing construction.
Recent articles in the Texas Monthy and the New York Times provide some useful insight on why Texas has been gaining migrants at such a high rate.
The $1.5 million that it would cost to fully replace balconies at the historic Kenesaw apartment building could end up tripling the condo fees of some low-income residents.
The Department of Energy's new energy efficiency rule drags us back to the dark days of 2013, when showers were allowed to emit no more than 2.5 gallons of water a minute.
Even supposedly well-designed rent control policies come at the expense of new supply while creating a class of renters opposed to necessary zoning reforms.
You can support pre-K education and affordable child care and worry about climate change while understanding that policymakers need to get out of the way.
A study suggests that "right-to-counsel" in eviction cases actually leads to greater homelessness.
Something to be grateful for.
It's oppressively hard, if not impossible, to sell homemade food in the Bay State. One lawmaker proposes massive regulatory reform.
The otherwise positive proposals are undermined by affordability requirements and density restrictions.
Unlike almost every rent control law in the country, the ordinance passed by St. Paul voters includes no exemption for new construction.
Funding for affordable housing and grants to incentivize streamlining zoning laws could represent a policy win for YIMBYs.
Will the "Unlocking Possibilities" program be an effective way to spark zoning reforms—or just a subsidy to planning consultants?
In Buffalo, incumbent Byron Brown staged a successful write-in campaign against DSA-backed candidate India Walton. Elsewhere in the country, DSA candidates won their local races.
Rev. Bernie Lindley of Brookings' St. Timothy's Episcopal Church says that the new rules violate his First Amendment rights, and that he won't comply with them.
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