Tuesday’s Headlines Are Capped Out
Fare-capping could be a way to rejuvenate transit ridership and help out low-income riders. Plus, a shocking jaywalking ad and more.
By
Blake Aued
12:00 AM EST on January 18, 2022
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- Fare-capping gives transit riders who can’t afford to buy long-term passes access to the same low fares for unlimited rides without having to pay upfront. It could be a tool to make transit more equitable and lure back riders lost during the pandemic. (Next City)
- Railway Age breaks down how Amtrak could spend $58 billion earmarked for intercity rail in the infrastructure act.
- Micromobility companies like Bird and Lyft — private companies that are worth billions — want subsidies from taxpayers so they can expand. (Smart Cities Dive)
- City officials and cyclists all over the country are divided on whether e-scooters belong on bike paths. (Wired)
- Denver is now over halfway done with a five-year project to build 125 miles of protected bike lanes. (Denver Post)
- One Florida school system is so hard up for bus drivers that it’s considering hiring Uber or paying parents to drive their kids to school. (WFLA)
- After near-record number of traffic deaths in 2021, San Jose drivers have already killed four people this year. (Spotlight)
- Residents are growing more accepting of Detroit bike lanes and starting to use them more, although concerns about gentrification remain. (WDET)
- A private group has raised $10 million in donations for a 34-mile urban trail around Cincinnati. (Spectrum News)
- After a failed attempt with Zagster, Wilmington, North Carolina, is restarting talks to bring in a bike-share company. (Port City Daily)
- Quebec decided that pranking a bunch of people into watching themselves get run over to deter jaywalking is a better use of government funding than, you know, trying to get drivers to stop running people over. (YouTube)
Blake Aued has been doing Streetsblog's daily national news digest for years. He's also an Atlanta Braves fan, which enrages his editor in New York.
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