Public transportation is a critical part of the economic and social fabric of metropolitan areas. While most of the nation’s 2,400 transit providers serve rural areas, almost all transit trips occur in the nation’s 100 largest metro areas, which account for over 95 percent of all transit passenger miles traveled. Transit is also changing as agencies are exploring ways to redesign their networks, integration new mobility services, and ask voters to approve new investments at the ballot box.

California: Helping Themselves to a Brighter Future

America’s Infrastructure Crisis Isn’t Overstated

The Bell Tolls for User-based Funding

Three Ideas for Big City Departments of Transportation

Shared Use Mobility: The Next Big Thing in Transportation

The Challenge of National Freight Policy: How to Pay For It?

Completing Projects With Less Funding: Sound Transit’s Success Story

2013 Transportation Weekly Archive Index

Labor Day on the Roads, Thanksgiving in the Skies

Tolling and Transit: An Emerging Nexus

Three Steps to Improving Intercity Transportation in the Amtrak Reauthorization
Eno’s Transit Cost & Project Delivery Research

Eno is undertaking a research, policy, and communications project to analyze current and historical trends in transit project delivery
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