December 10, 2022 marks the thousandth day of the world living with a pandemic. 

How will we harness our COVID Dividend?

Dear friends,

We are nearing 1000 days since the World Health Organization declared COVID a global pandemic. 

As we collectively emerge from the most severe impacts of both the virus and the efforts to contain it, Canada’s cities are facing significantly more complex challenges than before.

Although the acute impacts of COVID may be receding somewhat, urban areas are faced with numerous issues:

  • generational housing crisis, exacerbated by a mismatch between supply and demand, rising borrowing costs, supply chain constraints, rising land costs, and other factors
  • The decline of downtown visits and activity — from residents, workers, and tourists — extending the shuttering of retail spacesand erosion of amenities
  • A critical need for coordinated urban mental health and addictions strategies, especially for vulnerable populations without housing options and supports
  • The resurgence of encampments in parks and public space, sparking conflicts between people and businesses, communities, service providers, and government jurisdictions
  • The implications of continuing work-from-home patterns for public transit, urban vitality, and the financial sustainability of municipal services
  • The unpredictability of climate events – flooding, fires, and the looming risks of aging infrastructure
  • The disproportionate impact of the pandemic and containment efforts on equity-deserving people and communities 

Throughout history, urban disasters have prompted remarkable innovations. London’s 1854 cholera outbreak led to municipal water systems and the global 1918 influenza pandemic launched public immunization programs. In New Orleans, the fatal failures of engineered levees following Hurricane Katrina spurred the city to embed a ‘multiple lines of defense’ strategy, including natural systems, which now inform resilience planning around the world.  

We all recognize the enormous human and financial toll of tragic events like these, as well as the COVID pandemic. But we are not always as quick to recognize the profound dividends of these events — the behavioral shifts, infrastructure improvements, and policy redirections.

What will be the ‘COVID Dividends’ that influence how we build cities of the future? 

As we saw firsthand, our local governments, businesses, and community organizations were on the front lines, compelled to improvise and respond quickly to changing conditions. Which of these ad hoc measures will be the ones to ‘stick’? The Canadian Urban Institute will tackle those questions this fall with the return of CityTalk — dynamic online conversations that bring together people with distinct voices, perspectives, and opinions.

And on December 7, CUI is convening, along with national partners, a special summit to mark the thousandth day of the world living with a global pandemic. Our panellists and participants across the country will not only take stock of ways the pandemic reshaped our cities, but also highlight our best learnings – the COVID Dividends – for a robust, resilient, and equitable recovery.

Throughout the fall, CUI is collaborating with our partners on a slate of research projects, advocacy campaigns, and community engagement programs.

Canada is not alone in coming to terms with post-pandemic urban challenges. Next week, CUI will be in Potsdam, Germany for the first-everG7 Urban Development Ministers MeetingCUI Urban Fellow Bruce Katz will address national leaders about the crucial importance of empowering regional urban alliances to drive innovation and resilience.



CUI builds connective tissue across the country, harnessing the best on-the-ground energy and expertise to address our most pressing urban challenges.

As COVID recedes, we cannot lose sight of the enormous costs to our families, communities, and collective well-being, while also seizing on the potential of everything we learned: the COVID dividends.

 

 

Mary W. Rowe