Telling the Story of Inequality on Public Transit, With Maps

Emily Badger  |  The Atlantic Cities

When he lived in Chicago, during college and for several years afterward, Raymon Sutedjo-The was often conscious of stories about the inequality of the city’s transit system. People who lived on the North Side seemed to have an easier time getting around, while residents in remote lower-income neighborhoods on the South and West sides found themselves far from jobs with long and plodding bus commutes to get to them.

“Those questions of equity were always in the back of my mind,” says Sutedjo-The, now a master’s student in the University of California at Berkeley’s School of Information. He had these questions in mind when presented with a set of transit data from the cities of San Francisco, Zurich and Geneva this spring as part of the Urban Data Challenge. Designers and developers were given one week’s worth of data from the three cities, covering bus schedules, actual arrival times and passenger capacity for each line and stop, with the challenge to visualize it all in some new and meaningful way.

Sutedjo-The’s project, along with collaborator Sandra Lee, took second prize for posing some complicated questions beyond the quality of bus service itself (we recently wrote about another project, the transit Frustration Index, that shared second place).

Transit data is regularly the subject of some of our favorite visualizations, but this one is a bit different. “Can we explore equity issues using data as well? What would that look like?” Sutedjo-The asks. “Sometimes when we think about equity issues, we depend on qualitative data, personal stories and narratives. That’s powerful. But I wanted to start from the other side: Can we do that with numbers, with quantitative data?”

With their Transit Quality + Equity web application, Sutedjo-The and Lee mapped the frequency of service on every bus route in San Francisco from the week of Oct. 1-7 last year and accounted for the average delay at each stop between the scheduled and actual arrival times. That map – effectively reflecting the quality of transit service – is then shaded according to the poverty levels by census tract across the city (comparable poverty data wasn’t available for the two Swiss cities).

The resulting picture shows that some high-poverty parts of town aren’t well served by public transit, despite the fact that these neighborhoods may be most in need of it.

This pattern doesn’t hold across the city, with poor communities universally having sub-par transit service (or wealthier communities getting the best of it). The full map is mixed. But this is the type of analysis that should be welcome in any city as a first start to broader conversations about the shape of urban mobility.

“Using visualization is great because you can sum up this crazy amount of data in something that’s manageable and more digestible,” Sutedjo-The says. “But also you can’t really look at it as a final product.” {…}

Top image: hxdbzxy/Shutterstock 

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All Aboard Florida: Please Add a Trail to that Railway!

Matthew Toro  |  Transit Miami

Ladies and gentlemen: We present to you an important, visionary opportunity to support the creation of not only the first private railway network linking Miami and Orlando via the All Aboard Florida initiative, but also a recreational trail along that same 230-mile stretch!AllAboard_Arriving_web

All Aboard Florida is the ambitious project intended to link Miami and the greater Southeast Florida region with Orlando and the greater Central Florida region. It’s something we at TransitMiami are particularly excited about, and, frankly, you should be too!

What’s even more exciting, though, is the vision being advanced by the non-profit Rails-to-Trails Conservancy. With our (meaning the people’s) support, Rails-to-Trails hopes to make a small but significant modification to the All Aboard Florida railway plan: ADD A TRAIL!

RTC

That’s right, along with connecting Miami to Orlando with a much-needed railway, why not add a multi-use trail connecting these nodes (and everything in between) too?!

The Rails-to-Trails Conservancy is asking for our help in this regard with the following message:

Imagine traveling from Miami to Orlando by rail-trail!

It could happen, thanks to a new rail expansion project called All Aboard Florida. But your voice is needed to make sure rail-trail opportunities are included in the plan.

Take action now: Urge the Federal Railroad Administration (FRA) to include a trail alongside new rail service as part of All Aboard Florida.

All Aboard Florida is a proposed rail connection between Miami and Orlando. This rail line will be America’s first privately built, privately maintained inter-city rail services since the creation of Amtrak.

The best part is that the 230-mile rail corridor also provides an excellent opportunity for trails alongside the railway.

Right now, the FRA is in the early stages preparing an environmental impact study of All Aboard Florida — and they’re accepting public comments through Wednesday, May 15. It’s the perfect time for you to speak out for the inclusion of rail-trails in the plan!

The window for submitting public commentary on this possibility is about to be closed, so be sure to submit your message of support for the addition of a trail alongside the All Aboard Florida railway as soon as possible.

jxvl-baldwin_rt_bloving225x175Let’s make our voices heard: Write a quick, passionate, powerful message to the Federal Railroad Administration in support of a 230-mile trail from Miami to Orlando! {…}

 

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Yet another survey confirms: Young people want to be in town near transit, not in the suburbs

Lloyd Alter  |  Treehugger

Once again, another survey shows that the “drive ’till you qualify” approach to buying a home no longer appeals. Joel Kotkin can suck on this: A new BMO (big Canadian bank) survey shows a wide disparity between what older repeat homeowners are looking for and what younger first time buyers want.

Jennifer Pigg in the Toronto Star writes that after being in a safe neighbourhood,

the No. 2 priority for first-time buyers — which has helped fuel the boom of downtown cores and condos in Toronto and other major cities across the country over the last decade — is being near transit, according the BMO survey.


BMO/Promo image

The actual data are a lot more nuanced.

In most Canadian cities the downtown areas are among the safest, so given the overwhelming importance of “safe neighbourhood” the relevance to US cities might be skewed right here. When I asked my wife about her opinions about why quiet streets and good neighbours were less important to younger, first time buyers, she said “that’s because they’re first time buyers.” She has a point.

But nobody can dispute that access to public transit and a short commute is a lot more important to first time buyers, generally younger people, than it is to the national average. Interestingly, the bigger the city and the worse the commute, (look at Toronto and Vancouver numbers) the more important it is.

There are fascinating regional differences. Maritimers love good neighbours and couldn’t care less about transit; Quebecois want quiet as much as safety; Vancouverites really like to shop and party. But there is no question about the over-arching trend: short commutes and good transit are driving the bus.

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Another reason for mass transit: Better air quality

|  IndyStar

As a transportation planner and a public health professional, we couldn’t help but shake our heads at the ironic juxtaposition of two headlines in the April 24 Indianapolis Star. “Mass transit supporters may have to wait at the station” read one headline; immediately to the right, another one stated, “Air quality worsening in Marion County.”

With the Environmental Protection Agency estimating that, in urban areas like metropolitan Indianapolis, automotive emissions are responsible for anywhere between 50 and 90 percent of air pollution, it seems we could suggest a cause-and-effect relationship between those headlines: Less mass transit means more air pollution.

No, enhanced mass transit won’t suddenly cure Central Indiana’s long-running air quality problems (which, by the way, affect the region’s ability to attract new jobs), but no single thing will. As a result, it seems we should be taking every step we can to improve the air that we and our children breathe each day.

We believe mass transit will bring a lot of benefits to Central Indiana, from jobs and neighborhood development to better access to public services and, yes, a healthier environment – and we think most area residents would agree.

That’s why we want our elected officials to let us have a say. If they would allow voters to address the mass transit funding question as a referendum next year, we believe Central Indiana will choose to invest in a better, cleaner future.

Who knows? Maybe someday we could see another cause-and-effect pair of headlines: “Mass transit system flourishes in Central Indiana” and “Marion Country air quality improves.”

Ehren Bingaman

Executive Director

Central Indiana Regional Transportation Authority

Kim Irwin

Coordinator

Health by Design {…}

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IBM Turns Cell Phones Into Sensors to Monitor Public Transit

Ryan Gerhart  |  PSFK

Everyone knows that when a company gathers personal information about you, via cookies on the web or settings on your smartphone, they’re likely to sell that information. Then, you end up on the receiving end of much unwanted contact, emails, phone calls, etc, from the company that bought the data. But what if this data sharing among companies could work to your advantage?

In theory, that’s exactly what IBM’s trying to do.

In an effort to improve urban development and public transportation, an IBM research team worked together with the telecom company Orange to tackle some of the service issues with bus routes in the Ivory Coast. Working around the nation’s largest city, Abidjan, Orange released 2.5 billion call records from five million cell phone users in the Ivory Coast. (The records were cleaned of personal identity before release).

IBM was then able to take this unprecedented mass of mobile data, and essentially turn cell phones into sensors and measuring sticks (conjuring images of the Joker-location system from The Dark Knight. Don’t worry – it’s not). IBM was able to use data such as aggregate communication between towers, mobility traces for location and movement, and categorical identifiers that indicate larger population trends.

IBM-bus-routes

While the data is rough due to phone capabilities and use-frequency in less-industrialized nations, IBM was still able to use this unique strategy to better inform urban development with more efficient bus routes. For example, of the possible improvements found, the team suggested that

adding two routes and extending an existing one would do the most to optimize the system, with a 10 percent time savings for commuters.

The project also holds greater implications for mobile-data-driven research. Francesco Calabrese, a researcher and coauthor of the report for IBM, thinks

This represents a new front with a potentially large impact on improving urban transportation systems . . . People with cell phones can serve as sensors and be the building blocks of development efforts.

The records used for this pseudo urban planning project are months old, and not very useful for predicting what may happen once the improvements are put in place. However, this certainly appears to be a promising start in using non-descript mobile data for improved urban interaction. If the model could eventually be adapted to make use of real-time data, life in the fast lane will get that much faster. {…}

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Ohio budget passed by House would bar young students from taking public transportation to school: Michael K. McIntyre’s Tipoff

Michael McIntyre  |  Cleveland.com

School districts and public transit agencies in Ohio were baffled recently to come across an addition to the state’s school transportation law in the state budget approved by the Ohio House of Representatives that reads: “No transportation to or from school of pupils in grades kindergarten through five shall be provided by way of transit buses.”

Districts generally transport students on school buses, but some — particularly urban districts — contract with public transit agencies for some students.

Outlawing that, say transit and schools lobbyists, would be a big hassle.

rta bus.jpg

Photo: Cleveland Plains-Dealer

Schools testified this week before an Ohio Senate subcommittee considering the House’s budget. They said the restriction on public transit would be costly for cash-strapped districts that would have to buy more buses and hire more drivers.

Barbara Shaner, Associate Executive Director for the Ohio Association of School Business Officials, testified: “While we understand the perception of this practice may not be a positive one, school districts have successfully utilized public transportation options for students for many years. Student safety is always the highest priority.”

In Cleveland, eliminating public transportation for K-5 students would disproportionately hurt the nearly 4,000 homeless students and those who move around the district, estimated at 30 percent of the student population, said Roseanne Canfora, spokeswoman for the Cleveland Metropolitan School District schools. Kids that age are provided traditional yellow buses, unless they have no permanent address. Those kids rely on public transportation.

“A provision like this would be devastating to these students’ ability to get to school,” she said. Public transit systems would lose, too.

The Greater Cleveland Regional Transit Authority would stand to lose “a minimum of $500,000 annually,” said RTA spokewsperson Mary Shaffer in an email.

There also are questions about how such a law would be enforced and by whom? Would it include children traveling with siblings or parents?

“Are we to ask where the child is going, and then refuse to transport them if their destination is school?” asked Shaffer.

Opponents of the provision have won over Senate Education Finance Subcommittee Chairman Randy Gardner.

“Unless I learn there’s a compelling reason to prohibit public transportation for school children, then I will be supporting an amendment to remove this provision from the bill. I don’t speak for the entire Senate, but I think not providing this flexibility for local school districts, this historic flexibility to utilize public transit, doesn’t seem to be the best way to go.”

Jason Whalen, legislative aide for House Finance Committee Chairman Ron Amstutz, said the provision “arose out of discussion” in the house budget caucus about “concern for young children on public transportation, especially children who are traveling alone.”

Any changes made by the Senate would be open for discussion in a conference committee where differences are hammered out.

Said Gardner: “ I want to give it a full hearing. But clearly the burden of proof is on those who would want to end this.”

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New law will ban protesters from riding mass transit in California

RT  |

Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART) customers sit on a train at the Embarcadero station in San Francisco, California (AFP Photo / Justin Sullivan)

Risking arrest isn’t the only obstacle for Northern California protesters — under a new rule about to go into effect, political demonstrators could lose their right to ride public transportation.

Starting next week, law enforcement officers policing the Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART) system in San Francisco, Sacramento, Oakland and other cities can issue bus and subway bans for unruly passengers — and according to one local news report, that power could be used to prevent political protesters from getting to demonstrations or essentially going anywhere.

Under the recently passed State Assembly Bill 716, BART can issue “prohibition” orders to any passenger cited or arrested for certain offenses, essentially blacklisting some people from boarding public transit vehicles if they’ve been charged with certain crimes.

BART Board President Tom Radulovich told Bay City News the law is “an important safety initiative to keep our employees and riders safe,” adding, “We’re very concerned that for the past few years folks have been assaulting our station agents.”

We are really wanting to send the message that if you are going to come onto our system and be unruly or violent, there are going to be consequences,” BART spokesperson Alicia Trost told local ABC affiliate KGNO News.

But while the new bill will provide BART police the authority to immediately revoke riding privileges for persons arrested or convicted of acts involving violence, threats of violence, lewd or lascivious behavior or possession or sale of drugs on area transit, those charged with minor infractions could be targeted too. “AB 716 won’t only target violent behavior,” KGNO reported. “It can be applied to protestors who have been arrested during free-speech movements.”

The law will allow for prohibition orders to be issued on-the-spot if a person is just once arrested or convicted for a misdemeanor or felony involving lewd, violent or drug-related acts in a BART zone, but passengers cited three or more times for minor infractions in just as many months are subject to the ban as well.

Under the bill, a transit district may issue a prohibition order to any person charged with violating a number of local statutes, including Section 640 of state Penal Code — the law that goes after riders accused of “Willfully disturbing others on or in a system facility or vehicle by engaging in boisterous or unruly behavior” and those “Willfully blocking the free movement of another person in a system facility or vehicle.

Although the official statute includes a note from the state declaring that Section 640 “shall not be interpreted to affect any lawful activities permitted or First Amendment rights protected under the laws of this state or applicable federal law,” allowing BART officers to ban users even accused by law enforcement of a misdemeanor could disenfranchise a huge percentage of their rider base and has critics already warning of potential authoritarian overreach.

Certain instances have happened over the years that have caused some tragic things to happen, but you got to be careful who your profile,” BART passenger Kadmiel McCrory told KGNO.

Indeed, one doesn’t have to look too deep to divulge instances of arguable overreach in not just the Bay Area but on the BART system as well. On the morning of January 1, 2009, BART Officer Johannes Mehserle fatally shot an unarmed, 22-year-old passenger, Oscar Grant, on an Oakland train platform. The killing of Grant remains a highly contested issue among Bay Area residents, and has spawned a number of large protests impacting the BART system, including a November 2010 demonstration that led to 152 arrests. Then in July 2011, BART police shot and killed another passenger — a mentally ill homeless man name Charles Blair Hill — who is alleged to have thrown a knife at an officer. The response that occurred as a result can easily be considered a precursor to enacting AB 716.

Following the 2011 shooting death of Hill, BART passengers orchestrated a massive protest that made national headlines thanks in part to the involvement of Internet hacktivist group Anonymous. A rally for Hill days after his death began peacefully but ended in violence and at least three dozen arrests. When a second protest was planned the following month, BART officials responded by having cell phone service shut down in four separate train stations to prevent demonstrators from coordinating their actions.

We’re going to take steps to make sure our customers are safe,” BART spokesman Jim Allison said in a statement that August. “The interruption of cell phone service was done Thursday to prevent what could have been a dangerous situation. It’s one of the tactics we have at our disposal. We may use it; we may not. And I’m not sure we would necessarily let anyone know in advance either way.”

Although that protest never materialized as planned, Anonymous responded by leaking the names, passwords and other identifying information for more than 2,000 customers of a BART-affiliated website, announcing in a statement, “we will not tolerate censorship.”

Anonymous demands that this activity revolving around censorship cease and desist and we know you are already planning to do this again,” the hacktivists wrote. The Electronic Frontier Foundation and American Civil Liberties Union opposed the decision to throttle cell service as well.

Now with AB 716 going into effect, protesters may once again find they are unwelcome to ride on the fifth-busiest heavy rail rapid transit system within the United States. Accumulating only three easy-to-obtain infractions in just 90 days can cause a prohibition order to be issues, and when the law goes into effect on Monday, BART officers will actually be provided with the names and photographs of prohibited individuals in order to keep them from riding mass transit, BART police Chief Kenton Rainey told the San Francisco Appeal. According to Rainey, officers’ computers will contain information about active orders, and any persons picked up or cited on the BART system for new crimes can be matched against the database to see their status.

Rainey added that BART officers will go through training to work with special-needs riders, including the homeless and mentally ill. Even if one of those passengers is cited with a prohibition order, though, it might take a lengthy appeal process to have their ban rescinded. Prohibition orders restrict passengers from riding for anywhere from 30 days up to one year. {…}

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Millennials are no driving force as mileage in U.S. ebbs for eighth year

Phil Gregory  |  News Works

A report by the New Jersey Public Interest Research Group finds more Americans are leaving the driving to others, according to a report from the New Jersey Public Interest Research Group.

For the eighth year, the number of miles driven in the U.S. has dipped.

The biggest decline is among 16- to 34-year-olds who want to live in urban and walkable neighborhoods and are more open to using public transit, said Jen Kim, NJPIRG state director.

She expects that trend to continue and have an impact on government priorities for transportation infrastructure.

“We don’t need to spend as much on things like roads and highways and should instead switch to things like bike lanes, more public transportation options, buses, trains,” she said.

The trend will also contribute to ebbing gasoline consumption and a falloff in the gas tax New Jersey relies on to fund transportation projects, Kim said.

That means other sources of revenue will be needed to meet future transit needs.

Janna Chernetz of the New Jersey Advocate for the Tri-State Transportation Campaign agrees with that assessment.

The state will need to shift away from road widening projects and invest in other modes of transportation, she said.

“We need to see more of a focus on bicycle and pedestrian accommodations. We also need to be investing more in public transit,” Chernetz said. “New Jersey has been seeing record ridership over the past few years, and the money needs to be placed in transit to keep up with this growing demand.” {…}

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Convention highlights latest technology in bus public transportation

Michael Henrich  |  Fox59

INDIANAPOLIS — Hoosiers are getting a taste of what their commute could look like in the near future, as the American Public Transit Association holds its Bus and Paratransit Conference in the Circle City.

The convention showcases the latest technology in bus public transportation.

Fox 59 News took at look at one all-electric bus, which uses new technology to charge itself while pausing at bus tops.  The company, Proterra, and its founder claim that it can run all day long and hardly makes a sound, when compared to traditional diesel-fueled buses.

“I call the bus ‘Casper,’ because standing on the street curb you just see this white cloud go by and you don’t hear anything,” said founder Dale Hill.

IndyGo representatives are attending the conference and are in the process of upgrading its bus fleet.

IndyGo President and CEO Michael Terry spoke with Fox59 News as well, saying how he would like to see all-electric buses and compressed natural gas buses used in Indianapolis, in the long run.

Terry would also like to see the regional transit system, which failed to make it out of the General Assembly in 2013, to be passed.

“For a new regional governance, for a new local form of funding and to allow for a referendum: those were the three things in the bill,” Terry said.  “It’s an economic generator.  It’s about getting people to jobs, getting people to education, getting people to health care.  It’s part of our economic fabric.”

Despite the recent legislative set-backs, IndyGo is continuing to expand.

Terry said the public transit system received an additional $6 million from the City-County Council this year.  IndyGo is also adding a new route, the 86th Street crosstown route. {…}

 

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A Mesmerizing Timelapse Shows Just How Essential Public Transit Is to Zurich

Kaid Benfield  |  Atlantic Cities

A Mesmerizing Timelapse Shows Just How Essential Public Transit Is to Zurich

I don’t think filmmaker Alessandro Della Bella intended to make a video about transit in Zurich, but trains, trams, streetcars and the people who ride them are the clear stars in this hyper-fun time-lapse video.

Frenetic Zurich is one of three videos so far in a larger work.  Says Della Bella about the project as a whole:

‘Helvetia by Night’ is a time-lapse project about Switzerland by night. Short videos of long nights present you the stunning beauty of the Swiss Alps and show you the magic of a spectacular nighttime sky. Imagine watching a slide-show at fast speed or looking at a flip book. It is photography turning into a movie. Everything in the videos is real and happening out there while most of us are sleeping.

You won’t see the Alps in this one, but you will definitely see urbanism in action.  Enjoy:

{…}

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