Governance is at the core of any transportation issue. Public, private, and nonprofit actors are the machinery that enables the economy to function, compete effectively for employers and labor, and foster innovation. The ability of agencies to respond to changing and expanding demands varies across the country as is shaped to a large extent by a range of different institutional and organizational structures. Governance determines who makes decisions about capital and operating plans and sets out a process for how those decisions are made. Each structure has its own implications for funding, equitable and effective service patterns, and economic growth.

Introducing Policy Change: The Case of Knives on Planes

Eno Brief – March 2013

Transportation as Utility

Three New Visionary Ideas for the President

Eno Brief – February 2013

An Incomplete Agenda for the Nation’s Transportation System

Virginia’s Transportation Funding Proposal and the User-Pay Concept

Transportation Policy Resolutions for the New Year

Is Quantitative Easing an Option for Infrastructure Financing?

Eno Briefs – January 2013

2012 Transportation Weekly Archive Index
Reforming America’s Transportation System

In February 2019 the Eno Center for Transportation (Eno) and the Reason Foundation (Reason) convened a three-day workshop (the Workshop) at the Pocantico Conference Center of the Rockefeller Brothers Fund (RBF) near Tarrytown, New York. Supported by RBF, with additional funding from Smith…
Transportation at the Ballot Box

Voters increasingly play a critical role in shaping communities from coast-to-coast by casting their votes on investments and other decisions about transportation. The Eno Center for Transportation tracks and analyzes transportation ballot measures across the country.
