99% Invisible - The 15 Minute City
Episode Date: December 3, 2024How did the “15 Minute City,” a simple urban planning idea, spark protests, conspiracy theories, and death threats? This week, we unravel how a concept for livable cities became a global flashpoin...t.The 15 Minute City Subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ on Apple Podcasts to listen to ad-free new episodes and get exclusive access to bonus content.
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This is 99% Invisible. I'm Roman Mars.
In February 2023, protesters took to the streets of Oxford, England.
Many were wearing yellow safety vests and holding flags and signs with complaints about the local government.
Specifically, they were protesting new urban planning policies being carried out by their
city.
That's producer Chris Perube.
Now, under normal circumstances, a protest like this might get a little bit of local
media attention and then disappear.
But this one was different.
Thousands of people showed up.
And it was part of a bigger trend.
Last year, there were demonstrations happening in countries around the world protesting against an urban planning concept called the 15-minute city.
These protesters were angry, saying the 15-minute city represented fascism or socialism or some kind of a human rights violation, which was all really over the top.
Because as a planning concept,
the 15-minute city is completely inoffensive.
In a nutshell, the 15-minute city concept
is the idea that everything that a person needs
within a city should be theoretically reachable
within 15 minutes of their home by either walking
or active travel or public transport. So that's cycling, walking, buses, trains.
Burgas O'Sullivan is a reporter for Bloomberg City Lab.
It's a very simple concept. It's this idea that basically cities are going to be healthier
if you integrate all their uses together.
Whenever I've tried to explain the 15-minute city to people, their reaction has usually
been, oh, I mean, that sounds nice.
How could you argue against having a supermarket or a daycare down the street from your house?
But in 2023, the 15-minute city entered the world of far-right conspiracy theories, and
it became the source of protests, hate speech, and even death threats, all of which shows how even
a benign urban planning concept can be demonized by bad faith actors.
Okay, so Chris.
Yes, Roman?
We've been circling this story for a long time, but we're finally getting to it now.
Yeah, this story's been in the news for a couple of years,
and people have actually been asking us to do this story,
but now there's been a little bit of distance,
and it feels like it's the right time
for us to talk about the 15-minute city.
And so we're gonna get into the internet circus
around the 15-minute city, but first,
let's talk about where this planning concept originated. So this concept of a 15-minute city, it was, let's talk about where this planning concept originated.
So this concept of a 15-minute city, it was first laid out by this guy.
Professor Carlos Moreno, Sorbonne University, researcher and creator of the 15-minute city concept.
So Professor Moreno, he's this famous urbanist. He's from Colombia, but he's lived in France for a long time.
And Roman, you and I talked to him and I found him to be just this really affable guy.
Yeah, he's a delight.
There's so much energy, I enjoy talking with him too.
Totally, he's got this constant broad smile,
this trim beard, he just like brings
a lot of positive energy.
I am Buddhist by my culture.
This is very important for having inner peace. And at the same time, I am a scientist.
So before he coined the term 15-minute city, for years, Professor Moreno, he'd been thinking
about urban planning, and he concluded basically the way that we are laying out cities, it just
does not work. So let's talk about what's wrong with the way we have laid out cities.
Okay, so Ramon, we're going to have to do a little bit of urban planning 101.
If you're a regular listener of 99% visible, you probably know these ideas, but we're going
to just recap a few and radically simplify some things.
Is that okay?
That sounds good.
Okay, so for centuries, towns and cities were laid out in this very central way.
Like you would have a town square
with shops and amenities in the center
and then people would kind of encircle that.
But in the 20th century,
that changed with the advent of modernism
and the rise of certain very influential architects.
The actual problem is to find again the condition of nature.
And the answer is the major problem of today and tomorrow,
the proper occupation of the land.
Okay, so that is the voice of Le Corbusier.
Corbu!
Corbu!
Okay.
Yes, so he's a fixture on our show, obviously.
You certainly know who he is
if you've listened to enough 99PI.
And one of his major concepts was this new way
of laying out cities that he introduced in the 20s,
which he called Radiant Cities.
And so his idea was to have cities
where people lived in tall buildings,
which were separated by green space,
and people would live away from the noise
and the grime of factory life.
Exactly, and another one of his big ideas
is that a city should be broken up into functional sectors.
So this is the concept that people should live in one zone
and then work in another zone.
And all of that culminates with a paper
called the Athens Charter, which he published in 1933.
Right, so the Athens Charter basically lays out
zoning as we understand it today.
It said that people should live in one part of the city, work in another, and this
was just the way things were done.
Yeah, and urban planners take up Corbu's ideas after World War II, and this makes a huge
difference in how cities are planned.
So suddenly we have zoning, we have residential areas where you can only build housing, and
then areas where you can only build factories, and then areas where you can only put up offices
and businesses.
And that's something that really takes effect post-war
along with a second major trend,
which is the rise of cars.
The automotive city is a very short period
in the history of cities.
This again is professor Carlos Moreno.
Massive production of cars has started when Mr. Henry Ford has produced the first Model
T. The worldwide presence of a massive car is just after the Second World War.
What was the impact just in seven decades of the presence of car.
So we've just spent an entire year talking about Robert Moses
and how American cities became centered around freeways
and driving.
I mean, post-war cities around the world
became more car-centric and urban planners
were building more roads and highways all the time.
Exactly, so with zoning, people are getting separated
from things like work and school and, you know, movie theaters, leisure, and with zoning, people are getting separated from things like work and school and movie theaters,
leisure, and more and more people are taking cars
to get to these places.
And to be clear, this really is a phenomenon we're seeing
in North American cities after World War II.
This is not necessarily the case everywhere.
Right, absolutely.
So Professor Moreno, he's looking at these developments
and he's thinking, okay, this is not sustainable.
So in 2016, he pitches this concept called the 15 minute city as a climate change solution.
Basically all the important stuff should be 15 minutes away on foot or by bicycle.
Yeah.
And I feel like this is really straightforward.
Like this is, this idea predates him certainly.
Like many older cities are just naturally like this already because they were laid out
before cars and zoning.
It's a very simple concept and something that Carlos Moreno would admit too is that it is
not a new concept.
This is the direction in which planning has been moving pretty much from the late 10th
century, starting back in the 60s with people like Jane Jacobs.
That's Fergus O'Sullivan again from City Lab, invoking the patron saint of
walkable cities, Jane Jacobs.
And by the late 20th century, a lot of these ideas were becoming best
practices in urban planning.
So Professor Moreno, he takes all these ideas and he basically just
gives them a new package, right?
And that's why I think the idea of the 15-minute city really resonated
with people in this fresh way.
What I think Carlos Moreno's idea did that revolutionized this is it allowed people to
sit at the center of that idea. Because when you talk about a 15-minute city, you can sit
there and say, okay, what's within 15 minutes of my home? I do have a supermarket, I do have a pub,
I don't have a hospital, et cetera.
You can work through it and immediately
it becomes humanized.
You think, what do I need?
What do I have and what do I lack?
And to be clear, it's pretty unrealistic
to have everything within a 15 minute walking distance
and Professor Moreno totally acknowledges this.
But at least ideally, you'd have
the most essential stuff close by.
This is not a question to build a Louvre museum every 15 minutes.
This is not a question to build a cancer hospital every 15 minutes.
So, I mean, the concept sounds nice, it sounds simple, but how does it actually work?
So there's no one-size-fits-all version of this,
but there are some key policy ideas that have become associated with the 15-minute city. does it actually work? So there's no one size fits all version of this,
but there are some key policy ideas
that have become associated with the 15-minute city.
And one of them is reducing strict
single-use type zoning, right?
So we're no longer going to have residential areas
and business areas.
Instead, you would make sure that people are living
a lot closer to where they work.
We wanted to mix the users for having in the same area,
offices for working, areas for living, green areas, parks,
public spaces for people, cultural activities,
medical services, leisure activities,
in order to offer a diversity of services.
So less zoning is one policy.
Another might be restricting car traffic in certain areas.
So you can pedestrianize roads or you can say cars are not allowed in during these hours.
You can have congestion pricing.
There's lots of versions of that. Rather than saying cars will be banned, cities will be rethought so that cars no longer have
such a dominant space. Instead of saying you have six car lanes converging on a roundabout,
you just have two and then the rest could be opened up and it could be paved and you could
have greenery, you could have sports facilities. So I think it's basically about taking the
vibrancy of the town square, that vibrancy that we all recognize if we sort of go to
tourist places and having it everywhere, all the way across the urban fabric.
So there are a few more ideas Carlos Moreno has mentioned in connection with the 15 minute
city like more affordable housing, better public transit, connection with the 15-minute city, like more affordable housing,
better public transit, but really the 15-minute radius thing and reducing the centrality of cars,
you know, that's the crux of the philosophy. And as O'Sullivan pointed out there, there are
cities that actually already do this. There are cities that are already kind of close to being
the 15-minute city, especially in Europe. And this is just trying to replicate
what a lot of older European cities are like.
Yeah, but then the 15 minute city also gives them
kind of some language to what it is that they're doing, right?
So a couple of cities actually jump on the bandwagon
right away.
They say, we want to be 15 minute cities, right?
One of them is Shanghai.
And one of them very famously is Carlos Moreno's hometown, it's Paris.
So in 2014, Anne Hidalgo was elected mayor,
and a few years after that,
she made the 15-minute city
pretty central to their city planning.
And she actually named Carlos Moreno as an advisor.
So Paris started implementing a bunch of these policy ideas,
like partly under the guise of having a more livable city
and also around the concept of fighting climate change.
They reduced car lanes and they increased the number
of cycle lanes into the city center.
They pedestrianized certain areas,
they made other areas much, much less car accessible
and they have tried to increase the green areas by as much as possible,
partly because like so many places, Paris is suffering from extreme heat in the summer
and they're desperate to try and cool that down. And I gotta say, there is a visible difference in
the city, right? Like you see a lot more people on bikes, You see areas where cars cannot go in Paris now.
A lot of green spaces where people can walk.
So Paris took up the 15-minute city
as this kind of organizing principle,
but something happened in 2020
that really just thrust it into the spotlight
of global urban planning.
I think the reason it came into the media
and into public discussion with such powerful force was due to the pandemic.
It's very much that lockdowns, suddenly everyone is concentrated in their local areas.
And because kind of everything had changed, we were rethinking everything about cities.
Like, why do we live next to each other? What does work for?
And one of the things that was super clear as people were walking more and trying to find ways to interact, that it was really nice to be close to amenities.
Yeah, and lots of mayors and urban planners, like they start taking this up too. They're
hearing this from people. So in the wake of COVID, we're seeing lots of cities passing resolutions
and saying, you know, we want to be 15 minuteminute cities. We want to be more like 15-minute cities.
So Buenos Aires, Busan, and South Korea.
It's not just big cities though.
It's not just global capitals.
There's also some fairly unexpected places
that want to become 15-minute cities.
Like what?
So one American city that developed a plan
to become a 15-minute city was Cleveland, Ohio.
Okay. I mean, I've-minute city was Cleveland, Ohio.
Okay, I mean, I've spent some time in Cleveland, Ohio.
It's not especially dense.
It's not that walkable of a city, as I remember.
No, totally, but Cleveland's planning commission,
they set up a pilot program to change the city's zoning
with the goal of becoming a 15-minute city.
And another municipality, I was surprised by this,
it's a Canadian city I never would have expected to take this up.
It always comes back to Canada with you.
I am guilty as charged as resident Canadian guy on 99% Invisible.
The 15 Minute City has become a very worldwide popular movement.
In North America, for example, in Canada,
in Edmonton, close to Toronto.
Respectfully to Professor Moreno,
Edmonton is not close to Toronto at all.
That is wrong.
Yeah, it's like days and days drive away, right?
Yeah, I looked it up.
It's like a 36 hour drive, if you do it straight.
Okay, okay.
But I have to be honest, I was surprised to hear Edmonton was planning to become a 15
minute city because it just kind of sounded like a tall order to me. Like it's one of
those places where, you know, in theory you can get around without a car. Lots of people
do. But it's not super walkable in places.
It's a lot more challenging. It's not impossible, but the default is obviously the car at this point.
So this is somebody who I would say knows a thing or two about getting around at Edmonton.
Hello, my name is Erin Rutherford.
I'm a city councilor in Edmonton, Alberta, and I represent a ward in the northwest of
the city.
So when Erin joined the city council,
Edmonton had just approved a new city plan
that was based around the 15 minute city
because they saw their population
growing really fast actually.
They were adding a ton of new cars on the road
and it just didn't seem like a good idea
to keep going in that direction.
So under the new city plan,
the city would be more walkable,
it would be broken up into districts.
They're saying districts across the city of Edmonton.
And I'm guessing the residents of each district are going to be 15 minutes away from various
amenities.
Yeah, pretty much.
Yeah.
So the idea was that each district would have a park and a school and all the things you
need within a close proximity.
Seeing the trend of more people having to go further and further for work,
for the services that they need, because our city's footprint was growing and growing out rather
than up. How do we ensure that we're also building a climate resilient city in a city that allows
people to not have to drive an hour one way in traffic? So by 2022, Paris, Edmonton, according to Moreno, dozens of places around the world
have taken up this urban planning concept.
But as we know, from here on out, things get very rough.
So when we come back, how the far right made the 15-minute city and Carlos Moreno into the Booking Man.
So we're back with Chris Perube, and now we have to talk about the messy conspiracy part.
Unfortunately, yes. So in 2020, the 15 minute cities becoming popular
with urban planners and all these places,
but around this time, there was also a major spike
in awful political rhetoric.
So Roman, I mean, you remember what it was like
in the summer of 2020.
It was a brutal time.
Yeah, absolutely.
And some of the rhetoric, especially like far right rhetoric,
it was spilling over
into the conversation about urban planning.
There were a lot of conspiracy theories around lockdowns. There was a lot of people found
lockdowns enormously stressful, and then were tending to see the underlying politics of
that as inherently sinister. And I think actually that was the springboard.
Anti-lockdown activism bled into anti-15-minute cities activism.
So that's Fergus O'Sullivan again. He's a reporter at CityLab, who says these online posters were
taking this concept and their imaginations were just running wild. So they were starting to make
these giant leaps in logic. I suppose the idea of people have heard 15 minutes and then think that cities are going
to be portioned into 15-minute zones that are going to be controlled and that you will
therefore need some to pay a fee, pay a toll, have some kind of permit to get in and out
of these zones.
And of course, there's no part of the 15 minute city
that says anything about this whatsoever.
I mean, there's congestion pricing,
maybe it's kind of mixing with that as an idea,
but like there's nothing about the 15 minutes
inherently that involves anything remotely like this.
So then how does this conspiracy form and then spread?
Well, it's not clear who started it exactly, but it bubbled up from kind of the usual far
right corners of the internet, some very unpleasant websites that I had to visit to research the
story with people saying, you know, this 50 minute city thing, it sounds a lot like lockdowns.
And as this is happening, people are making all these leaps in logic, right?
That you're going to need a permit to leave your neighborhood and things like that.
You know, you can attribute some of this to ignorance, but a lot of this is just bad faith
because there's nothing in the policy that says this at all.
Totally. But there are these conspiracy theorists who are kind of twisting it and they're actually
taking it to an even more extreme level than licenses to leave your neighborhood.
It is a kind of potentially a form of tyrannical authoritarian control.
Even some people assess some sort of harbinger of a world government.
Yeah, it always comes down to that, people getting paranoid about a world government.
So this conspiracy theory is picking up momentum.
Eventually it all gets kind of lumped in with this idea called the Great Reset.
So Roman, do you know about the Great Reset theory?
Right. I know about this.
Yeah. So in 2020, the World Economic Forum during the pandemic, they proposed this project they called the Great Reset.
They're having these conversations everybody's having like,
oh, should we question some assumptions? What if we did things differently?
You know, what if we had a more sustainable world, things like this?
But they package it as the Great Reset
and they make these videos promoting it,
one of which is narrated by King Charles.
We have an incredible opportunity
to create entirely new sustainable industries,
investing in nature as the true engine of our economy.
I mean, they immediately run into this branding problem investing in nature as the true engine of our economy.
I mean, they immediately run into this branding problem because The Great Reset is a really ominous sounding title.
Yeah, especially when it's coming from
the World Economic Forum and the British Royal Family.
Like, yeah, that sounds not great.
And if you're inclined to think there is a plot
to start a one world government,
this might contribute to that.
And some of these right wing people on the internet are suggesting global elites are
using COVID as a way to initiate the great reset, right?
This is where their thinking is going.
And then those ideas start to go mainstream.
It jumps from these far right social media echo chambers to the general population. And that's because of a pretty notorious
right-wing internet guy named Jordan Peterson.
So Roman, how much do you know about Jordan Peterson?
You know, I don't honestly know a whole lot.
I try to avoid him as much as possible
because everything I've sort of encountered
has been pretty loathsome.
Yeah, no, this is a good plan for your mental health.
So Jordan Peterson was a professor of psychology at my alma mater, actually the University of Toronto, where I went to university.
The fightin' Leafs.
The varsity blues, but thank you. So he doesn't teach there anymore actually.
So over the last decade, Peterson has become pretty notorious.
He has these ideas about masculinity, you know, and refusing to use transgender
people's pronouns. Very famously, he advocated for the all meat diet. So, you know, believe
it or not, I'm not a huge fan of the thoughts and works of Jordan Peterson.
Yeah, it doesn't sound like you have a lot in common besides your alma mater.
No, no. But New Year's Eve 2022, Jordan Peterson tweets some charts about the 15 minute city and the great reset. So he's amplifying this, right? And he adds a quote saying, they're great.
I'm not going to do his voice. I'm sorry. I wouldn't know if you did. It's a very muppety
sounding, just trust me, it's very muppety sounding, more so than mine somehow. Okay.
The idea that neighborhoods should be walkable is lovely. The idea that idiot idiot tyrannical bureaucrats can decide by fiat where you're allowed to
drive is perhaps the worst imaginable perversion of this idea.
So this keeps going, it keeps spreading all over the place.
And within a couple months, by February 2023, there is the protest taking place in downtown
Oxford in England.
Thousands of people show up, they are carrying signs that say things like,
no to 15 minute cities,
and then save our freedom of movement,
worship and family life.
So they're really lumping in a lot of grievances
in one message there.
Yeah, it becomes this weird magnet for a lot of things.
And to be clear about this,
like Oxford was proposing
some pretty strict traffic measures. Like they were really going to limit when cars could come into the
downtown. You could still go to the downtown, but you just had to like walk or take public transit.
And this wasn't even part of their 15 minute city plan, weirdly, but the protesters, they lumped in
this traffic plan and the 15 minute city and all of these other anxieties. And at this point,
the Oxford protest,
this is actually the first time Carlos Moreno
is becoming aware of the internet reaction
because they're actually using his name.
Like they are actually protesting him in Oxford.
I was in Paris.
I received the photo of the demonstration
for saying Moreno is Pol Pot, Moreno is Hitler,
et cetera, et cetera. It was very, very difficult. for saying Moreno is Pol Pot, Moreno is Hitler, etc. etc.
It was very, very difficult.
I mean, this is just so baffling and so tragic.
Like even though a lot of the protesters
are completely mischaracterizing his ideas,
it still has an effect on it.
Well, I mean, at first he's confused, right?
Like this whole idea sounds ridiculous.
Like he's an urban policy professor.
And now there's these protesters out there saying
he's like at the center of world events.
This is the psychological bad moment for a scientist.
Because I am a scientist, I'm not politician.
I'm not candidate, just a scientist.
And from there, this idea starts showing up all over the place on the right-wing internet.
Protests are popping up around the world against something called 15-minute cities.
Now we've covered the 15-minute cities here on the show and we warned you about them.
They'll essentially be contained unless you get permission to leave.
That's true.
How are they going to put us in there?
The idea that they're starting to roll out in Europe. unless you get permission to leave. That's true. Which is, yeah, that's the idea
they're starting to roll out in Europe.
Who seems to me that they're using
the climate change narrative to,
will have travel restricted.
I mean, one of the ironic things about this to me,
in this like whole Mishgos,
is that the 15 minute city doesn't strike me
as a left wing idea at all.
Like if anything, it really hearkens back
to an old way of thinking about city planning
that about, you know, kind of small towns.
Like it's kind of weirdly conservative.
Yeah, I think you're right.
And I think a lot of city planning people
agree with you about that.
There's nothing inherently leftist about it.
I suppose there may be a focus on affordable housing might be seen as that.
But really, it's ultimately a traditionalist way of thinking.
And people with perhaps a more small-c conservative approach to the world are embracing it more,
which makes it slightly paradoxical that people like Jordan Peterson, who are
all about going back to some idea, their idea of what was 100 years ago or so against it.
So after the protests in Oxford, all this stuff on the internet, things actually escalate
even more, right?
So city councillors in Oxford start getting death threats, and Professor Moreno starts
to get death threats.
This was a very complicated period for me, for my wife, for my family, because I received
a lot of threats, death threats.
I was under police protection.
This was a very, very complicated situation. I cannot stress how weird it is that this delightful, delightful,
thoughtful man talking about making cities better for people is getting death threats.
It's it's unbelievable. And like, it's obvious, like at this point,
the entire situation is just clearly out of control.
So it just kind of snowballs in this kind of hysterical climate, a hysterical climate
that of course is exacerbated by having figures like Mark Harper, a government representative,
actually feeding it.
Okay, so please tell me who Mark Harper is.
Well, Mark Harper was actually the Minister of Transportation for the United Kingdom in
2023. So he's one of those people who was appointed during the of Transportation for the United Kingdom in 2023.
So he's one of those people who was appointed during the last days of the British Conservative
government.
You know, there was lots of chaos.
There were a lot of people moving in and out of cabinet.
There was the head of lettuce, obviously, that out survived a prime minister.
So October 2023, Mark Harper is the transportation minister, not for long, as it turns out.
And he starts talking about the 15-minute city, and he starts talking a lot like these protesters.
What is different, what is sinister, and what we shouldn't tolerate, is the idea that local
councils can decide how often you go to the shops, and that they ration who uses the roads
and when,
and they police it all with CCTV.
This is so ridiculous. These are not serious thinkers. These are not serious men.
No, no, they're not.
And it's all coming to a head as cities are trying to implement policies to become
more like a 15 minute city, right?
And they're facing these protests and this pushback,
even somewhere like Edmonton is facing this stuff.
Earlier this year in 2024, Edmonton City Council
were going to finalize the city plan,
which includes this concept of districts,
and 15-minute radius to all of the amenities that you need,
like we talked about earlier.
And in the spring, they are having public hearings about it.
And there were people who brought some reasonable concerns to the table, right, about density,
about some specifics of the plan.
But there were also lots of people who are repeating these talking points that they clearly
got from the internet.
My understanding is that this means I will need to stay within my district to meet all
my needs so that the city can meet its climate plan objectives.
I don't think Edmontonians can afford to be part of a renovation experiment of this size
so quickly.
No one in the government wants to lose their job and people don't want to speak up.
And that's why the citizens in the streets are starting to rise.
And we need you to hear us.
And you're not hearing us.
So these protesters are coming.
This is completely new for like an Edmonton city planning meeting.
Aaron Rutherford admits that there might have been something of a branding problem in terms
of their proposal that maybe set some people off.
It's unfortunate that, you know, they're named districts
because a lot of people think that that is very, like,
Hunger Games-esque in the visualization
that it creates for them, but it's just a planning term
that's been used since planning has been a profession.
I hadn't thought about that, but that's just a...
That is actually, you know,
I can sort of see how it conjures that image, yeah.
Well, I mean, but still, it's just like,
it's the word district.
It's like you live in a school district too, you know?
You do.
It's so funny to me that Hunger Games
has a bigger footprint than all of social studies education.
Yeah, apparently.
So, Counselor Rutherford says that this kind of anger, it's pretty new, but it's actually
not surprising to her because it's a tone that she is hearing pretty much in every part
of her job.
The reality is it's not just 15 minute communities, it's police funding, it's, you know, so many
topics that we're talking about right now that are creating those visceral responses
from folks.
So municipalities like Edmonton that are pursuing the 15-minute city, they're faced with this choice,
right? Like, do we backtrack or do we forge ahead with this policy that is getting this kind of
visceral angry reaction? I mean, if I was facing that kind of pushback, I can imagine backing off.
It seems like a completely rational and reasonable thing to do.
Totally.
And actually what one city did is they just went ahead with the plans, but they
just dropped the name 15 minute cities.
So it's just like the 16 minute city.
Yeah.
I think it's a little bit more subtle than that.
Just a tiny bit more subtle, but this is actually what happened in Oxford, England.
So that's the place where they had the massive protest with thousands of people in the streets.
They just dropped the name 15-Minute Cities.
You can get rid of the 15-Minute City concept and keep the policies,
because all it is is literally thinking about what's in your area within a 15-minute radius of your home.
Get rid of that concept.
You can still work towards low-traffic neighborhoods, greater pedestrianization, tree planting, all of these
things that individually aren't automatically going to face the same kind of resistance.
I mean, we've seen this before, like when something comes up like the Green New Deal
and it becomes kind of unpopular and lots of negative associations sort of get attached
to it. The people who are really diehards that are for the fundamental concepts they're in,
just stop calling it the Green New Deal.
It's the same thing and it's just part of the Inflation Reduction Act.
Right.
This kind of thing happens all the time.
Yeah.
It's smart to me.
I don't know.
It just seems like smart politics.
Well, I guess so.
But there's other cities who went ahead with these plans and they kept the name 15-Minute
Cities.
And that's actually what Edmonton ended up doing in the end.
So why is that?
I mean, it seems like it could be a lot easier to just give it a rebrand.
Erin Rutherford explained this to me.
So she said in her view, it would actually so distrust if they stopped
referencing the 15 Minute City and just went ahead with the same plans anyway.
I think we're almost doing a disservice, stopping calling it 15-minute cities because the more we do
call it 15-minute cities and the more nothing substantially changes in people's lives,
the more that that becomes, oh, my fears didn't come to reality. However, if we stop using that
language, that actually creates validation in terms of you might be calling it something
different, but now you're just trying to do the same thing under a different name and
it can actually fuel this trust further.
I can see why she wants to take her time on this.
But what ended up happening in Edmonton then?
Well, in June, the city put their plan to a vote and they kept the language intact,
you know, despite all of this protest, despite this pushback, but they did add an amendment to placate some people.
So the amendment says,
the district plan shall not restrict freedom of movement,
association, and commerce in accordance
with the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
Yeah, and to be clear,
this doesn't change anything at all.
No.
This is just an additional thing
to make people feel better. Like this
little bit of an act of political theater just playing along with the game that they've set up.
Right, because freedom of movement is actually guaranteed under Canadian law, right? So it
wasn't necessary at all. And actually, at the beginning, this bothered Erin Rutherford, because
she was voting on this, right? She was a city councilor, and she was worried about giving credence
to disinformation around the 15-minute city.
My logical brain and my policy best practices brain
wanted to say no, but my human side and my heart
and realizing that the harm was greater
in not giving people that certainty than the
harm of making a redundant sentence in a document swayed me.
So the city council adopted the city plan, they added this amendment, and now they're
on this path to bringing in some of these actual policy changes to becoming a 15-minute
city.
And there's other cities that are forging ahead with it too,
despite everything that happened.
And then of course, there's Carlos Moreno, the delightful
Carlos Moreno, the father of the 15-minute city.
Right.
So for a while he kept getting these death threats, but
eventually, you know, those started to calm down and people
actually started standing up for him in public.
You know, there was this article in the New York Times that was
defending him and he started seeing petitions online.
The scientists launched an online manifesto for supporting me. In a few days, more than
I think 5,000 or 6,000 have signed it.
Professor Moreno noticed people on the internet were actually starting to move
on and eventually the vitriol and the threats, those stopped.
And he even published a book called The 15 Minute City, where he kind of doubles
down on these concepts on this whole idea.
And I really love that because I'm glad he's getting this idea out there
and he's promoting it again.
But I have to say this whole thing with the 15 minute city, it just has me really exhausted.
Because in the next couple of years, I feel like any hope for positive change is going
to be at the local level, right?
Like it's going to be concentrated at the municipal level.
And if something like the 15 minute city has to go through this gauntlet, you know, marches
and disinformation and death threats, if this is the price of putting forward something
like the 15-minute city, how many people realistically are going to stand up and try to make a positive
change?
Like how many people are going to be like Carlos Moreno?
Thank you so much, Chris.
Thanks, Roman.
99% Invisible was produced this week by Chris Berube with editing help from Emmett Fitzgerald,
mixed by Martin Gonzalez, music by Swan Real and George Langford, fact-checking by Graham
Hayesha.
Carlos Moreno's book, The 15-Minute City, A Solution to Saving Our Time
and Our Planet is available now. Special thanks this week to Rebecca Rossman, Sheena Rossiter,
and Hannah Aguru. Our executive producer is Cathy Tu. Our senior editor is Delaney Hall.
Our digital director is Kura Kolstad. Our intern is Taylor Shedrick. The rest of the team includes
Jason DeLeon, Gabriella Gladney, Christopher Johnson, Vivian Leigh, Lasha Madone,
Kelly Prime, Joe Rosenberg, Nina Potok, Jaka Medina Gleason, and me, Roman Mars. The 99%
of his logo was created by Stefan Lawrence. We were part of the Stitcher and SiriusXM
podcast family, now headquartered six blocks north in the Pandora building. And beautiful.
Uptown. Oakland, California.
You can find us on all the usual social media
sites as well as our own discord server. There's a link to that as well as every past episode of 99PI
at 99PI.org.