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.

Congestion Pricing Delay in New York Ripples Across the Country

House Hearing Looks at California’s Zero-Emission Railroad Mandate

Pick Your Own Political Nightmare, New York Edition

Hochul’s Reversal on Congestion Pricing Draws Blowback

What’s to blame for NJ Transit train delays? It’s complicated

Franklin Pierce, 14th President (1853 to 1857): Deferring to Railroads and Acquiring Property

Senate Commerce Committee Reviews Roadway Safety

House Passes Bill to Cut Off All Chinese Rolling Stock Purchases

FY24 CIG Funding Totals Finally Made Public

Why Study Transit History?

Webinar: Navigating the Past: Lessons from America’s Transit History
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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