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Better Cities Project
  • Home
  • About Us
    Our Vision
    BCP’s vision is that free-market municipal policy solutions are broadly available, widely acceptable, and regularly employed, enabling American cities to achieve their full potential as engines of economic prosperity. We reject the idea that cities are lost to free-market principles or policies.
    Our Mission
    BCP uncovers ideas that work, promotes realistic solutions, and forges partnerships that help people in America’s largest cities live free and happy lives.
    Learn More
    • About Better Cities Project
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    • Our Team
    • Collaboration and Careers -- Work With BCP
  • Research and Projects
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  • Contact

    Address

    304 S. Jones Blvd #2826
    Las Vegas NV 89107

    Phone

    (702) 608-2046‬

    Hours

    Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. - 5 p.m.

    Email

    [email protected]

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Home Community, Growth and Housing

BCP’s Patrick Tuohey on The Messy City Podcast

Housing and zoning, economic development policies, streetcars and all that jazz

Patrick TuoheybyPatrick Tuohey
April 15, 2025
in Community, Growth and Housing, Economic Prosperity, Transportation and Infrastructure
Reading Time: 1 min read
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BCP’s Patrick Tuohey on The Messy City Podcast
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I am grateful to Kevin Klinkenberg for the invitation to sit and speak with him about many things municipal on his podcast, The Messy City. Kevin is an urban designer, architect, planner, zoning wonk and developer. Importantly. Kevin is thoughtful about the policies that help and hinder city growth.

We both live in Kansas City proper, and so while some of our conversation is specific to The City of Fountains, much of it will be familiar to anyone who deals with cities of any size. Ultimately, we all want our cities to grow and our people to flourish. But how?

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In one exchange, I get to offer my view on economic development subsidies. “We have turned zero problems into two problems. We have both made it too expensive to develop here. That’s the first problem. And then to solve that problem, we have created a system where we transfer needed tax revenue to developers… we need to go back to that first problem, get all that stuff out of the way. and then we’ll be back to zero problems.”

For more about Kevin’s view, I recommend you visit his substack, and especially his founding column, “What is a ‘Messy’ City?“

Tags: Economic DevelopmentHistory of CitiesHousingInfrastructurePoliticsTransitZoning
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Patrick Tuohey

Patrick Tuohey

Patrick Tuohey is co-founder and policy director of the Better Cities Project. He works with taxpayers, media, and policymakers to foster understanding of the consequences — sometimes unintended — of policies such as economic development, taxation, education, and transportation. He also serves as a senior fellow at Missouri's Show-Me Institute and a visiting fellow at the Virginia-based Yorktown Foundation for Public Policy.

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Recent News

Local dollars, local decisions: realigning infrastructure incentives

Local dollars, local decisions: realigning infrastructure incentives

June 11, 2025
Kansas City, Kansas considers end to commercial parking mandates

Kansas City, Kansas considers end to commercial parking mandates

June 9, 2025
Why does American multifamily architecture look so banal?

Why does American multifamily architecture look so banal?

May 27, 2025

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