In "America's Eviction Badlands," universities are developing web apps to help tenants stay in their homes.

In "legal design labs" at Brigham Young University and the University of Arizona, law students are building software to provide automated legal aid to tenants facing eviction.
Virtually no tenants have legal representation in eviction cases; by contrast, most landlords do. In Utah and Arizona, Kriston Capps reports in CityLab, the process is further weighted by "strict laws" that leave tenants little time to plan a defense after receiving an eviction notice, and the incentive to evict is high: "One-sided laws that favor landlords offer a tempting money-making opportunity for property owners, since even a single day’s stay beyond the terms of a notice can result in triple per-diem rent plus any court costs."
The LawX Lab curriculum is part of a trend toward "legal innovation built on design thinking," Capps writes. In a previous semester, the class at BYU created SoloSuit, an app that helps users respond to debt collection notices; in New York, JustFix.nyc guides tenants through the process of getting repairs for habitability problems.
FULL STORY: Is There a Better Way to Battle Evictions?

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Planetizen Federal Action Tracker
A weekly monitor of how Trump’s orders and actions are impacting planners and planning in America.

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Without reform, restrictive zoning codes will limit the impact of the city’s planned transit expansion and could exclude some of the residents who depend on transit the most.

Judge Orders Release of Frozen IRA, IIJA Funding
The decision is a victory for environmental groups who charged that freezing funds for critical infrastructure and disaster response programs caused “real and irreparable harm” to communities.
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