True. Just saying no one has died from paying a toll.
You really need to take more bullshitting classes and improve bulshitting skills. Especially if you want to do things like urban design - I would think few bullshitting courses would be a general pre-requestive for that major?
In a country with lots of poor people, and a significant number of hunger deaths (11% of the population are food insecure, and more than 10 thousand people a year die from hunger) any extra charge - like tolls or extra cost of AC - may result in people pushed over the edge. Not to mention toll enforcement strategies, where people accumulating significant toll debts can have their registrations revoked or cars seized, leading to the inability to work and feed the family!
This wouldn't give you a passing grade, maybe in some low-level community college; but you should definitely be able to do things better than that.
I don't know what I'm supposed to do with this reply.
Having an air conditioning system does not necessitate running it. If someone cannot afford to run the air conditioner for a few days (even though Washington State has the lowest power rates of any state), then they don't run it. Or the use it only when necessary, like my grandparents.
Having AC to begin with is the true obstacle. It's easier if builders just include it with the cost of construction, and roll it into the overall cost (either to buy, or rent). To be fair, this is how it is in almost all of the US. After all, over 90 percent of households in the US have air conditioning, and it seems unlikely that a plurality of those households were the installer of that AC system.
For the record: malnutrition is a much more serious issue than lack of AC.