Transportation: Page 46
-
Concerns about safe deployment of autonomous vehicles aired at Congressional hearing
While autonomous vehicles offer the promise of improved safety, they bring questions of costs, absence of federal safety standards, and far-ranging impacts for cities and the workforce.
By Dan Zukowski • Feb. 4, 2022 -
Smart Cities Dive 2022 Outlook
In the year ahead, city leaders will continue preparing for the electrification of cars, buses and buildings, while also tackling the complex challenges of crime, growing inequities, labor shortages and extreme weather.
Feb. 2, 2022 -
Open Mobility Foundation approves its Curb Data Specification tool
The group’s board of directors this week approved the initiative designed to improve the use and safety of city curbs, “one of the most high-demand public assets,” LADOT General Manager Seleta Reynolds said in a statement.
By Jason Plautz • Updated May 6, 2022 -
Pittsburgh bridge collapse raises questions, infrastructure funding concerns
The span fell the day President Joe Biden was visiting to promote the IIJA, underscoring his push to improve the nation's dated infrastructure.
By Matthew Thibault • Feb. 1, 2022 -
Deep Dive
More electric buses join transit fleets as costs and technology improve
As zero-emission buses are added to more transit fleets, officials and bus manufacturers are optimistic about their potential, but they caution that planning, training and learning from other cities are needed.
By Dan Zukowski • Jan. 31, 2022 -
Connected vehicle tech at impasse as NTSB, FCC fight over spectrum issues
Two federal agencies can't agree on data communications spectrum needs for vehicle-to-vehicle and vehicle-to-infrastructure communications that experts say will save lives.
By Dan Zukowski • Jan. 28, 2022 -
8 trends shaping cities in 2022
Cities continue to confront challenges surrounding the pandemic, the climate crisis, rising inequality and public safety this year.
By Cailin Crowe, Danielle McLean, Maria Rachal, Dan Zukowski and Jason Plautz • Jan. 26, 2022 -
Q&A
How Keolis North America CEO sees the state of public transportation today
As public transit agencies struggle with labor challenges and changing ridership, the head of a large private sector contractor that operates bus and rail systems across North America seeks to help cities adapt.
By Dan Zukowski • Jan. 25, 2022 -
Creative financing needed to boost EV charging infrastructure: DOE
As the White House aims to roll out a network of 500,000 EV chargers, a speaker at the National EV Charging Summit said public dollars alone can't meet Biden's 2030 goal for half of passengers vehicle sales to be EVs.
By Jason Plautz • Jan. 21, 2022 -
Lyft, Bird execs say subsidies, infrastructure crucial to expanding micromobility
Cities should prioritize making parking for micro-electric vehicles universal and pay "pennies on the dollar" to provide service in less profitable, low-density neighborhoods, industry leaders said this week during Micromobility World.
By Jason Plautz • Jan. 14, 2022 -
Retrieved from Department of Energy on October 08, 2021
North Carolina sets goal to sell 50% zero-emission vehicles by 2030
An executive order released Friday by Gov. Roy Cooper expands the state's climate ambitions with new goals for zero-emission transportation and workforce equity.
By Emma Penrod • Jan. 11, 2022 -
Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg praises smart city innovation at CES
In a virtual address last week, Buttigieg said he anticipates that cities will be built on connected technology and guided by government policy that encourages collaboration, experimentation and support for workers.
By Dan Zukowski • Jan. 10, 2022 -
Electric, autonomous delivery vehicle boom expected on city streets as inventories and orders grow
With Amazon, FedEx and Walmart among those placing major orders for electric delivery vehicles, thousands will appear on the road in coming years, executives announced at CES.
By Dan Zukowski • Jan. 7, 2022 -
Scooter helmet laws pit safety against accessibility
Miami allowed scooters to return to city streets with a new helmet requirement, but some critics warn that top-down helmet mandates do more harm than good.
By Jason Plautz • Jan. 6, 2022 -
Opinion
At last, an infrastructure bill that gives people a reason to get out of their cars
The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act could bring tech-enabled mobility to urban ‘transit deserts,' expanding economic opportunities while reducing emissions and traffic congestion, writes Via's head of public policy.
By Andrei Greenawalt • Jan. 6, 2022 -
Retrieved from Ford on December 22, 2021Deep Dive
The road ahead: How legacy auto brands will level the EV playing field in 2022
After setting the stage at CES with lofty product announcements, carmakers will focus on value, range and brand heritage to close the gap with disrupters like Tesla.
By Peter Adams • Jan. 5, 2022 -
12 predictions about the trends that will shape smart cities in 2022
As local leaders continue to adapt to the tremendous changes that the past year brought, industry players share how they anticipate cities will evolve.
By Cailin Crowe • Jan. 5, 2022 -
Q&A's from 2021 that spotlight 13 smart cities voices
Revisit the year's one-on-one conversations, including with tech and climate leaders in Honolulu, Phoenix and San Diego and with execs at Revel, Veo and Drop Mobility.
Dec. 23, 2021 -
"Jogger Crosses Empty New York City Street During COVID19 Quarantine" by Anthony Quintano is licensed under CC BY 2.0
How the pandemic has shaped driver and pedestrian behavior
The past year has seen drastic changes to driver behavior and commuting patterns, ushering in an era of high traffic and pedestrian deaths.
Dec. 22, 2021 -
To cut traffic deaths, safety groups call for an approach that factors in human error
The USDOT is expected to put out the first National Roadway Safety Strategy in January. Can safety officials, law enforcement, automakers and government regulators agree on how to stop the surge in traffic fatalities?
By Dan Zukowski • Dec. 21, 2021 -
Cities lack sufficient data to monitor their progress toward climate goals: report
Just 19 of 100 large U.S. cities studied by the American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy are on track to meet their climate goals, and only 25 have set goals to cut emissions from transportation.
By Dan Zukowski • Dec. 17, 2021 -
Seattle's regional transit system adopts plans for more equitable service
The King County Council unanimously approved a series of long-range plans that will expand service for underrepresented communities, a shift from its historic focus on serving commuters and suburban riders.
By Jason Plautz • Dec. 16, 2021 -
New Jersey pursuing on-demand AV transit service in Trenton
State officials say the service could help bridge first- and last-mile transportation, while one expert says it's unclear if "sexy new transportation technologies" like autonomous vehicles can achieve transportation goals.
By Danielle McLean • Dec. 15, 2021 -
White House unveils EV charging action plan, prepares network rollout guidance for cities, states
The Joint Office of Transportation and Energy will help guide federal efforts and coordinate with state and local entities for an equitable rollout of a charging network, utilizing funds from infrastructure legislation.
By Robert Walton • Dec. 14, 2021 -
Smart tech aims to improve transit accessibility for the visually impaired
Transit data firm Moovit and UK startup WeWALK have partnered to bring real-time transit directions to electronic canes, intended to improve the accessibility of public transit for visually impaired riders.
By Jason Plautz • Dec. 14, 2021