See my commentary @washingtonpost.com in re changing patterns for climate risk "information" among consumers. The seasonal dimension does seem important, if it holds up statistically. It is nice to see Redfin engaged. www.washingtonpost.com/weather/2025...
Posts by Sara McTarnaghan
In addition to all of the other benefits already reported about NYC congestion pricing, "In the first six months of the program, air pollution – in the form of particulate matter 2.5 micrometers and smaller – dropped by 22% in the Congestion Relief Zone (CRZ)"
news.cornell.edu/stories/2025...
The report explores strategies that states, municipalities, philanthropies, and community-based organizations can use to expand solar opportunity, alleviate high energy cost burdens, and improve residents’ quality of life.
Screenshot of table available on report page showing neighborhoods in housing with the most potential for solar opportunity
In Houston, neighborhoods with the greatest potential for solar benefit are primarily clustered in eastern and northeastern parts of the city.
Screenshot of map report landing page that shows chicago neighborhoods with the highest potential
In #Chicago they found 9,088 owner-occupied, single-family properties were in high-potential areas, with roughly half of those properties ready for solar now and another 1,801 properties ready for solar with roof repairs.
The team piloted the methodology in Chicago, Illinois, and Houston, Texas—two large cities with distinct energy and regulatory contexts, climate and weather risks, and housing stocks.
2) assess the solar readiness of these neighborhoods by quantifying the number of residences ready for solar installation now and residences that would require roof upgrades first.
1) identifying neighborhoods with high energy burdens, low income levels, and high shares of Black and Latina/o homeowners that would most benefit from solar installations
The Solar Opportunity Index is a methodology to help local actors target programs and maximize climate and economic co-benefits, through 2 steps:
As more communities are wrestling with energy affordability, new research from colleagues Anne Junod, @oriyacohen.bsky.social and Kameron Lloyd helps identify where solar investments reduce energy burdens www.urban.org/research/pub...
What other state and local examples are worth lifting up for resilience and efficiency wins?
Cross-sector partnership, robust incentives, and clear communication made it possible, while protecting flexibility and choice for those rebuilding
70% of eligible households have participated in the voluntary program to date
New research from my colleagues @andrewrumbach.bsky.social and Kameron Lloyd explores *how* to rebuild with attention to energy efficiency, resilience and affordability, by looking closely at the Rebuilding Better program following the devastating Marshall Fire in 2021 www.urban.org/research/pub...
Appreciate y'all sharing with your networks, unfortunately due to capacity I’m unable to respond to individual questions about the position.
📌 Learn more about our ongoing initiatives :
Urban Institute Climate and Communities program www.urban.org/expertise/cl...
Ideal candidates are:
- Strong quantitative and/or qualitative research and writing skills
- Curious about policy and passionate about climate and environmental justice
- Looking for a collaborative, mission-driven environment
- Willing to relocate to Washington, DC (hybrid)
What you’ll work on:
- Innovative projects that help communities across the U.S. prepare for and recover from climate impacts
- Research that informs local, state, and federal policy decisions
This role is perfect for an impact-oriented, early career professional interested in contributing to policy research, program evaluations, and technical assistance focused on #climate,#disasters, and #communityresilience.
🚨Hiring alert
Our team at Urban Institute is #hiring a Research Assistant to join in Spring/Summer 2026!
urban.wd1.myworkdayjobs.com/en-US/Urban-...
Climate injustice:
“…in the aftermath of extreme weather events, lower-income neighbourhoods are less likely to rebuild and do not return to their pre-disaster state, whereas higher-income areas rebuild and tend to improve compared with their pre-disaster state…”
Zillow’s climate score rollback is a wake-up call: build open, future‑conditions federal flood maps -- gold‑standard, trustworthy data for building codes, mortgages, and our future. Column today: open.substack.com/pub/susanpcr...
Interesting and some similar findings as our recent surveys in Colorado. In the US context, particularly troubling, given the attack on institutional emergency management.
My @urbaninstitute.bsky.social colleague @sara-mctarnaghan.bsky.social spoke to @npr.org's Marketplace about the importance - and fate - of hazard mitigation funding:
www.marketplace.org/story/2025/0...
Research @urbaninstitute.bsky.social shows that federal government's sweep of homelessness in DC & other cities is a fool's errand.
Criminalization & forced relocation:
—Are an ineffective deterrent
—Disrupt resources access
—Prolong homelessness
—Cost a lot of $
What solves homelessness? Housing.
📢JOB ALERT 📢My department at the @ausis.bsky.social is hiring a social scientist who works on disaster!! The specific focus is open so check out the job announcement below (I'm not one the committee, so this is ALL I know) #ComeWorkwithMe!
american.wd1.myworkdayjobs.com/AU/job/Main-...
👏to collaborators @andrewrumbach.bsky.social @wcurrangroome.bsky.social @mitchellthorson.com
Bar chart showing FEMA hazard mitigation grants to gulf coast states since 2005.
and the evolution of hazard mitigation funding.
Line chart showing Disaster Resources from HUD and the SBA Delivered an Additional $86 Billion to gulf coast states between 2005 adn 2022
to exploring how costs will double by 2050 due to climate change