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.

Saturday MetroRail service set to resume as transit ridership shows gains

With transit thrown off track, rush hour may never be the same

House Hearing Shows Partisan Divide on High-Speed Rail

Looking Back – When Amtrak Almost Got its Own Trust Fund in 1997

A Budding Model: Los Angeles’s Flower Street Bus Lane

Webinar: A Budding Model: Los Angeles’s Flower Street Bus Lane

Public transit agencies across US seek to lure back commuters lost during the pandemic

Public transit hopes to win back riders after crushing year

Recapping the 2021 Eno/MAX Program Kickoff

Amtrak at 50: How McKinsey Designed A National Railroad

Here’s how the GOP infrastructure plan stacks up against Biden’s transportation plans
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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