Skip to content
Sponsored

Tuesday’s Headlines Are Coming Together

An interactive feature shows how urban highways divide cities, something Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg highlighted during a trip to Oakland.
Tuesday’s Headlines Are Coming Together
This is the future conservatives want. The Advocate via CNU
Sponsored
  • A New York Times interactive feature illustrates how highway construction has segregated cities.
  • Tesla’s misleadingly named Full Self-Driving feature can’t pass a driver’s test in Europe. So why is it allowed in the United States? (The Verge)
  • More unhoused people are turning to transit for shelter because their cities lack enough housing, but some are also using it for transportation to and from jobs or services. (Sage Journals)
  • Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg was in Oakland on Sunday to tout funding to reconnect communities divided by urban freeways (San Jose Mercury News). On Monday, he visited Houston (ABC 13), where he was reportedly late to his press conference because he was stuck in traffic (Twitter).
  • As the D.C. Metro’s Yellow Line shutdown drags on, officials worry commuters will turn to cars or work from home permanently. (Washington Post)
  • A Hillsborough County, Florida, sales tax would raise $342 million a year for transportation, 45 percent of it going to transit. But a lawsuit over ballot language threatens the November referendum. (Tampa Bay Times)
  • Expect more buses and less road construction in Denver now that the Colorado requires the environmental impact of transportation projects to be taken into consideration. (Denver Post)
  • San Diego received a $300 million California grant to move a rail line away from an environmentally sensitive area. (Union-Tribune)
  • Even usually progressive San Francisco isn’t immune to bikelash. (Standard)
  • The Seattle suburb of Bellevue has two plans for car-free zones. (The Urbanist)
  • A citizen-led plan for the Belgian city of Leuven calls for prioritizing pedestrians and restricting car traffic. (Climate-KIC)
  • The successor to Germany’s popular nine-euro summer transit pass won’t be as cheap, but it could still incentivize drivers to take transit instead. (City Lab)
  • The number of potential drivers who take Barcelona transit instead could fill more than 50 stadiums. (The Mayor)
Photo of Blake Aued
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.

Read More:

Sponsored

Support Streetsblog

Comments Are Temporarily Disabled

Streetsblog is in the process of migrating our commenting system. During this transition, commenting is temporarily unavailable.

Once the migration is complete, you will be able to log back in and will have full access to your comment history. We appreciate your patience and look forward to having you back in the conversation soon.

More from Streetsblog USA

Friday Video: The H.A.R.D. Fight Against Hit-and-Runs

December 12, 2025

Wednesday’ Headlines Are on Autopilot

December 10, 2025

City Shuts Down Volunteer Crosswalk Painting Event in Los Angeles

December 9, 2025

Tuesday’s Headlines Set the Record Straight

December 9, 2025
See all posts