Author Archive
Alana Semuels
Management
The Utter Inadequacy of America’s Efforts to Desegregate Schools
In 1966, a group of Boston-area parents and administrators created a busing program called METCO to help desegregate schools. They thought of it as a quick fix to a passing problem. But the problem hasn’t passed, and METCO isn’t enough to fix it.
- By Alana Semuels, The Atlantic
Management
Is This The End of Recycling?
Americans are consuming more and more stuff. Now that other countries won’t take our papers and plastics, they’re ending up in the trash.
- By Alana Semuels, The Atlantic
Management
The End of the American Chinatown
How renewed interest in downtown living is threatening neighborhoods that long provided a first stop for new immigrants.
- By Alana Semuels, The Atlantic
Infrastructure
When Elon Musk Tunnels Under Your Home
The billionaire is drilling for futuristic transit under Los Angeles. He didn’t have to ask the neighbors first.
- By Alana Semuels, The Atlantic
Management
The Homeless Can’t Escape San Francisco’s Smoke-Ridden Air
As wildfires burn out of control, they are impacting the state’s other crisis—the growing number of people living on the streets.
- By Alana Semuels and Robinson Meyer, The Atlantic
Management
Tech Billionaires’ Obligation to the Cities Around Them
California voters are being asked to tax big corporations to solve local problems. But is that the companies’ responsibility?
- By Alana Semuels, The Atlantic
Management
Can Philanthropy Save a City?
In California, the cash-strapped city of Stockton is hoping so, courting millions of dollars from private investors to solve a whole host of social problems.
- By Alana Semuels, The Atlantic
Finance
Trump’s Complaints About Amazon Have a Historical Precedent
The fraught history of government-subsidized package delivery.
- By Alana Semuels, The Atlantic
Management
A Small Town Kept Walmart Out. Now It Faces Amazon.
How can local businesses compete with a company so local it lets people shop from their couches?
- By Alana Semuels, The Atlantic
Finance
What Amazon Does to Poor Cities
The debate over Amazon’s HQ2 obscures the company’s rapid expansion of warehouses in low-income areas.
- By Alana Semuels, The Atlantic
Workforce
Could a Local Tax Fix the Gig Economy?
A group in New York is calling for a fee on all gig-economy transactions in order to provide workers with benefits like paid sick leave.
- By Alana Semuels, The Atlantic
Management
The Barriers Stopping Poor People From Moving to Better Jobs
Highly educated people still relocate for work, but exorbitant housing costs in the best-paying cities make it difficult for anyone else to do so.
- By Alana Semuels, The Atlantic
Management
Trump Administration Puts on Hold an Obama-Era Desegregation Effort
The rule would have helped poor Americans move to more expensive neighborhoods with better schools.
- By Alana Semuels, The Atlantic
Management
Are Pharmaceutical Companies to Blame for the Opioid Epidemic?
Recent state, local and tribal lawsuits are asking courts whether the current crisis is comparable to the one over tobacco in the ’90s.
- By Alana Semuels, The Atlantic
Management
All the Ways Retail's Decline Could Hurt American Towns
As brick-and-mortar stores close, local governments in struggling regions lose much-needed tax revenues.
- By Alana Semuels, The Atlantic
Management
The Unworkable Math of Trump’s Budget
Economists say the document doesn’t account for the costs of tax cuts and its other policy proposals.
- By Alana Semuels, The Atlantic
Management
Could Small-Town Harvards Revive Rural Economies?
Less-populous places with colleges are thriving, but reproducing that success elsewhere is difficult.
- By Alana Semuels, The Atlantic
Finance
Why Would Congress Bail Out Miners’ Pensions?
If legislators on Capitol Hill don’t act by the end of April, miners will lose their health-care benefits. They may soon lose their retirement benefits, too.
- By Alana Semuels, The Atlantic
Management
Why It’s So Hard to Get Ahead in the South
In Charlotte and other Southern cities, poor children have the lowest odds of making it to the top income bracket of kids anywhere in the country. Why?
- By Alana Semuels, The Atlantic
Management
How Trump's Budget Would Impact Cities' Poorest Residents
Programs that help low-income Americans are not among the administration’s priorities in its just-released budget.
- By Alana Semuels, The Atlantic