Housing Vouchers, Brain Tuneup, Water Sustainability, Mindfulness
Top of Mind with Julie Rose - Season 1, Episode 980
- Jan 8, 2019 7:00 am
- 1:42:08 mins
Families with Housing Subsidies Could Rent in Better Neighborhoods. Why Aren’t They? Guest: Alicia Mazzara, Research Analyst in the Housing Division, Center on Budget and Policy Priorities More than two million American families get monthly vouchers to help cover the rent through the nation’s Housing Choice Voucher program. The idea isn’t simply to keep families from becoming homeless. It’s also about helping them into a more stable economic situation so they won’t need government assistance anymore. The trouble is, most of these families don’t end up using their housing vouchers for apartments in the kinds of neighborhoods that make “moving up” likely. Rather, in most of America’s biggest cities, people on housing assistance end up overly-concentrated in poor, racially-segregated neighborhoods where schools struggle and good jobs are hard to come by. The real bummer here is that there are plenty of affordable apartments in higher-income neighborhoods. So why aren’t more families going there with their rental vouchers? Why Imagining Phobias May Help you Conquer Them Guest: Tor Wager, Professor of Cognitive Psychology and Director of the Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience Laboratory, University of Colorado Boulder “Exposure therapy” is a real thing that’s been common since the 1950s where people confront the thing they’re afraid of until the fear goes away. But what if, rather than experiencing the scary thing, you could just imagine it and still overcome the fear? Neuroscientist Tor Wager’s lab has found that works, too. Getting Rid of Brain Bubbles Guest: Kelly Lambert, Professor of Behavioral Neuroscience, University of Richmond It’s one week into the 2019 –and if your New Year’s resolutions are already on the rocks, maybe you’re suffering from “brain bubbles.” That’s what neuroscientist Kelly Lambert calls the mental traps that distort reality, throw us off track, and leave us disheartened. Battling Droughts with Recycled Water Guest: Edmund Archuleta, Director of Water Initiatives, University of T