Lara Fishbane

@larafishbane

NYU Law '23 | runner (unless tired) | on the sourdough bandwagon | afraid of the dark, spiders, etc.

New York, NY
Joined October 2012

Tweets

You blocked @larafishbane

Are you sure you want to view these Tweets? Viewing Tweets won't unblock @larafishbane

  1. Retweeted
    29 Jun 2020

    This is a governance failure, not an inevitability of the disease.

    Show this thread
    Undo
  2. Retweeted
    13 May 2020

    Amid the “will cities survive ?” narrative, there has been talk that people were already leaving center cities. It’s not true! In fact, downtown population energy is real and likely to outlast the pandemic. THREAD

    , , and 2 others
    Show this thread
    Undo
  3. Retweeted
    7 May 2020

    This is an excellent graphic summary of the fortunes of 100 city downtowns since 1980. In short over 70 downtowns experienced population boom or rebirth. Chicago emerges a big winner (which has led to neighborhood backlash). Full analysis here.

    Undo
  4. Retweeted
    4 May 2020

    It’s not an illusion: pushed American traffic off a cliff. This is great for the air, bad for revenue, and a vision of a less car-dependent future. But can it last? Latest with

    Show this thread
    Undo
  5. Retweeted
    1 May 2020

    We regressed what offered and the correlations were huge. Here's the model results, but gist: Democratic counties stayed inside, advanced services moved online, and the Governors stay-at-home orders mattered. Important evidence!

    Show this thread
    Undo
  6. 10 Apr 2020

    such a rewarding trip to Brownsville to see all the hard work & innovation around digital equity and inclusion. thanks again / / & all!

    Undo
  7. Retweeted
    8 Apr 2020

    MAP THREAD: A major story is less physical travel in U.S. metro areas. So + I looked at “Community Mobility Reports” to understand what might be happening. TL;DR: Much fewer trips, but patterns are mixed (1/)

    Show this thread
    Undo
  8. Retweeted
    2 Apr 2020

    Major broadband providers have dropped fees, and the sheds light on why internet access is essential during a pandemic — and after. Brookings senior research assistant explains why via

    Undo
  9. Retweeted
    26 Mar 2020

    Grocery workers are frontlines heroes -working at a frantic pace to keep us fed, at risk to themselves. Over last wk, I interviewed grocery workers from RichmondVA to BeckleyWV, DC & MD to learn how they are impacted. Here's what I found. 1/

    Show this thread
    Undo
  10. Retweeted
    23 Mar 2020

    I'm watching the "just let the virus do it's thing and keep the economy humming" school of thought grow on the right. And it seems worth noting something crucial.

    Show this thread
    Undo
  11. Retweeted

    “The coronavirus pandemic isn’t making broadband essential—it’s exposing that it always was,” and write.

    Undo
  12. Retweeted
    20 Mar 2020

    Too many American kids live w/o essential internet services. As providers and local jurisdictions quickly fill the digital gap—and homework gap—one silver lining from may be our nation finally closes the digital divide.

    Undo
  13. Retweeted
    20 Mar 2020

    Still can't find toilet paper? 's impact on trade and logistics is just beginning, and there's a ton of confusion on where and when this impact will heighten. One point is clear though: Not all places or people will be hit evenly

    Undo
  14. Retweeted
    17 Mar 2020

    is devastating the restaurant industry. Why is this a problem and what should we do about it? A thread:

    Show this thread
    Undo
  15. Retweeted
    17 Mar 2020

    The COVID-19 public health crisis is an extreme test of the necessity of many parts of our basic daily routine: commuting to the office, face-to-face meetings, and what it means to be a worker in the modern economy.

    Undo
  16. Retweeted
    17 Mar 2020
    Undo
  17. Retweeted
    16 Mar 2020

    .: "I still think of my parents as the grownups...It took a pandemic to thrust me into the role of the responsible adult and them into the role of the heedless children."

    Undo
  18. Retweeted

    The legacies of Cleveland’s racial discrimination will not be easily erased, write + , but a commitment by civic actors to the digital equity space can contribute to lifting the area’s communities up. Read the new blog.

    Undo
  19. Retweeted
    27 Feb 2020

    In partnership with , we just released "Digital prosperity: How broadband can deliver health and equity to all communities"

    Undo
  20. Retweeted
    19 Feb 2020

    "I worked very hard for it" is the worst possible justification for being a billionaire. You know who works very hard? Single mothers working two minimum wage jobs with just-in-time scheduling and a bus commute.

    Undo

Loading seems to be taking a while.

Twitter may be over capacity or experiencing a momentary hiccup. Try again or visit Twitter Status for more information.

    You may also like

    ·