CityLab Daily
Also today: DOJ lawyers urge shift in tactic to end NYC’s congestion toll, and the latest from the new State of the Air report.
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Pride parade organizers across the US are scrambling to secure funding after losing support from long-time corporate sponsors. A new survey found that 2 in 5 corporate executives — in industries ranging from federal contractors to consumer brands — plan to reduce Pride month engagement this year, with many citing pressure from the Trump administration and conservative activists as key reasons.

Pride groups are turning to small businesses and their local communities to fill their budget gaps, but many warn that the retreat of corporations threatens the organizations’ long-term viability. Read more from Linda Poon, Kelsey Butler, and Lily Meier today on CityLab: Pride Groups Scramble to Fundraise as Corporate Sponsors Lag

Rthvika Suvarna

More on CityLab

DOJ Lawyers Urge Shift in US Tactic to End NYC Congestion Toll
A now-removed letter urged the Department of Transportation to switch their strategy to argue that the toll no longer aligns with the agency’s goals.

Saving the Signature Sound of Washington, DC
A new museum dedicated to Go-Go music comes with a message for both gentrifiers and lawmakers: #Don’tMuteDC.

More Americans Breathe Unhealthy Air Due to Wildfires, Extreme Heat
The number of Americans living with high levels of ozone and fine particles has risen by 25 million since last year’s State of the Air report.
 

What we’re reading 

  • Judge bars Trump from denying federal funds to ‘sanctuary’ cities that limit immigration cooperation (Associated Press)

  • After the wildfires, this high school needed a campus. It found a Sears (New York Times)

  • Tesla-powered homes for sale in Houston promise “outage protection” (Chron

  • The Supreme Court’s “Don’t Say Gay” argument went disastrously for public schools (Vox)

  • Green groups decry plan to list world’s biggest meatpacking company on NYSE (Guardian)


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