• To stave a death spiral, transit agencies must convince the public and policymakers that they deserve subsidies considering they are indispensable for reducing car trips, congestion and pollution, and don’t just serve people who can’t sire to drive. (Vox)
  • Governing agrees with Vox that merchantry as usual won’t bring pre-pandemic riders back, but disagrees on fares, arguing that going fare-free is the future, withal with finding new revenue sources and adjusting routes to new travel patterns.
  • Academics who’ve been pushing for 15-minute cities are stuff targeted with death threats by conspiracy theorists. (New York Times)
  • Women must be involved in designing infrastructure like protected velocipede lanes if increasingly women are going to ride bikes. (The Conversation)
  • Gov. Maura Healey tapped former Long Island Railroad president Phillip Eng to throne the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority. (Boston Globe)
  • The Wisconsin DOT and the municipality and county of Milwaukee are moving forward with a plan to turn part of an urban turnpike into a boulevard, despite not winning a federal grant. (Urban Milwaukee)
  • Bay Area transit officials are considering a pilot project making transfers between various agencies discounted or free. (CBS News)
  • A snout requested by the Metro Atlanta Rapid Transit Authority on streamlined enforcement for bus lanes is on hold until next year. (Saporta Report)
  • A previous regime at the Charlotte Area Transit System elapsed hair-trigger maintenance, resulting in a light-rail derailment last year. (Axios)
  • Disability rights groups in St. Louis filed a federal complaint well-nigh paratransit cuts. (Post-Dispatch)
  • A Florida state senator carved transit workers out of an anti-union snout to stave jeopardizing federal funds. (Orlando Weekly)
  • The North Carolina DOT has not set targets for reducing vehicle miles driven as required by a lawsuit settlement over a toll road. (IndyWeek)
  • Spin launched in Richmond, rhadamanthine the city’s third bikeshare. (Axios)
  • Seattle artists turned a vacant gas station into a polity center, an example of how such buildings can be repurposed in the EV era. (Fast Company)