Tulsa award of $ 10,000 for new residents pays – and everything else you need to know about this week

The California’s proposal ban on the plants around the homes is under fire, Disney is steps in an affordable housing market, the sliders revitalize Blackest Plaza San Francisco, and more.

  • Since 2018, as part of the program to attract new inhabitants and paint its economy, Tulsa, Oklahoma, paid more than 3,400 distant workers from $ 10,000 to move to town – and it seems to work. (Bloomberg)
  • The proposed ban on California on plants within five meters of homes intends to cover the danger of respect, but experts are warning that they can deal with green buffers that can actually slow down blue and protect homes and protect houses. (Times Los Angeles)

  • Disney builds a nearly 1,400 unit of an accessible housing project in Florida, part of the goal to serve very workers who keep magic that hold Magic who keep magic running behind scenes. Here’s why fun Behemoth is building development. (Reside)

Disney builds accessible housing development in the horizon west near Orlando, Florida.

Disney builds accessible housing development in the horizon west near Orlando, Florida.

Photo courtesy of Disney

  • The American cities are quietly removed from their cheapest tools to maintain COOL buildings and reduce energy costs: light colored, reflective roofs. The enemy? Lobby “Dark Roof”. (Guardian)

  • Skateboarders breathe life in San Francisco Second Plaza Long-Francisco. With 2 million dollars, rails and several small embankments, the city turned the fentannyl-roadden pestolhed into the community space. (The New York Times)

Top photo: Dee Liu / Getty Images

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