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NJSPL – Is Property Assessed Clean Energy a White Windfall

NJSPL – Is Property Assessed Clean Energy a White Windfall

As part of an ongoing clean energy research project, Dr. Winecoff will be examining California’s Property Assessed Clean Energy (PACE) program, first developed and launched in 2009, to identify policy recommendations that can inform New Jersey stakeholders and policymakers as the Garden State begins to implement their own recently approved PACE program.

Stamato Commentary: Colleges and universities should maintain neutrality amid campus protests

Stamato Commentary: Colleges and universities should maintain neutrality amid campus protests

Linda Stamato explains that Rutgers University and many other institutions have historically upheld a principle of institutional neutrality in political matters, a stance dating back to the Vietnam War era. Presidents like Mason Gross and Edward J. Bloustein maintained that while the university as an entity should not take official positions on public issues, it would support individual freedoms of expression.

Compare Electricity Rates in New Jersey

Compare Electricity Rates in New Jersey

“Not everyone bothers to take advantage of the opportunity to switch,” said Clinton Andrews, professor of urban planning and policy development at Rutgers University and director of its Center for Urban Policy Research (which has research contracts with the New Jersey Board of Public Utilities).

NJSPL – Introducing the Promising Practices Project

NJSPL – Introducing the Promising Practices Project

The Promising Practices Project (PPP) aims to identify and document innovative teaching and learning practices that have successfully accelerated learning in K-12 schools across New Jersey. This project seeks to catalog and disseminate innovative, impactful, and replicable strategies that can enhance student learning statewide.

Geronimo PhD ’24 receives ACSP Best Dissertation in Planning

Geronimo PhD ’24 receives ACSP Best Dissertation in Planning

Laura Geronimo Ph.D. ’24 is the recipient of the 2016 ACSP Barclay Gibbs Jones Award for Best Dissertation in Planning. Her thesis explores the political economy of coastal climate adaptation, or the struggle for power and resources between competing interest groups.

GenAI, Ingenuity, the Law, and Unintended Consequences

GenAI, Ingenuity, the Law, and Unintended Consequences

Andrews begins by asking the age-old question: “If people want the benefits of innovations, must they simply accept the unintended adverse consequences”? He implies that there
are certain tools and techniques that could assist designers in addressing challenges before they take root, so that the challenges may be easily preventable before diffusion of an innovation into the market.

Herts Named New Superintendent of Civil Rights Monument

Herts Named New Superintendent of Civil Rights Monument

The National Park Service (NPS) has announced the selection of Rolando Herts, Ph.D. Planning and Public Policy ’11, as superintendent of Birmingham Civil Rights National Monument and Freedom Riders National Monument in Alabama, effective Sep. 9.