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Kea Wilson

Recent Posts

Photo: Tony Webseter, CC

Study: Automatic Emergency Braking Systems Fail At Deadliest Crash Speeds

By Kea Wilson | Sep 29, 2022 | No Comments
The automatic emergency braking systems that will soon come standard on nearly all new cars don't reliably prevent crashes at the high speeds at which the overwhelming majority of roadway deaths occur, a new study finds.
Photo: Erica Fischer, CC

Advocates Hope D.C.’s Proposed Right-On-Red Ban Will Inspire National Reform

By Kea Wilson | Sep 28, 2022 | No Comments
The nation's capital is poised to become the second major city in the United States to repeal a dangerous law that allowed drivers to make right turns at red lights — and some advocates believe other communities are overdue to follow.
Photo: Paolo Silva, CC

Study: Downtown Congestion is Still Down — And It Could Help Explain Roadway Dangers

By Kea Wilson | Sep 27, 2022 | No Comments
Downtown rush hour has still not roared back to pre-pandemic levels even as car travel surges in the suburbs, a new study finds — and it may help explain why traffic deaths have stayed so stubbornly high in U.S. communities.
Photo: Urbanism Next

'Pedestrian Delivery Robots' Have the Same Challenges As ... Pedestrians

By Kea Wilson | Sep 26, 2022 | No Comments
Sidewalk delivery robots struggle to get around U.S. cities for many of the same reasons as human pedestrians, a new study finds — but that's not the only reason why the emerging technology might struggle to deliver on its car-cutting promises without careful planning.
Mayor Jim Brainerd, with a friend. Main photo: JimBrainerd.Com

‘We Couldn’t Take A Roundabout Out if We Wanted To’: An Interview with Jim Brainerd, Mayor of Carmel, Ind.

By Kea Wilson | Sep 22, 2022 | No Comments
The Indianapolis suburb of Carmel has become internationally famous for its commitment to a hotly-debated traffic safety intervention known as the "roundabout." It wasn't always that way, though — until Mayor Jim Brainerd came along. 
Photo: City of Carmel

Study: Some Roundabout Designs Slash Injury Crashes Up to 85%

By Kea Wilson | Sep 21, 2022 | No Comments
An Indiana city famous for roundabouts was able to cut injury-causing traffic crashes by as much as 84 percent at intersections outfitted with the circular design, a new study finds.
Photo: Ken Lund, CC

Mile-High City Halts Two Highway Expansions — And Gives the Money to Transit Instead

By Kea Wilson | Sep 15, 2022 | No Comments
Colorado will cancel two planned highway expansions, citing a new climate rule that advocates say should be a model for communities across America. 
High tech doesn't mean high value says author Paris Marx (inset). \Main photo: Samuele Errico Piccarini via Unsplash, CC

How Tech Billionaires are Threatening America’s Transportation Future

By Kea Wilson | Sep 14, 2022 | No Comments
Author Paris Marx reveals exactly what's wrong with the fantasies of some of the most prominent transportation tech "visionaries" of our time, and draws a blueprint for a better mobility system based on serving the needs of the many.
Photo: Lincoln Blues, CC

School Bus ‘Stop Arm’ Cameras Work — So Why Don’t More States Use Them?

By Kea Wilson | Sep 13, 2022 | No Comments
Artificial intelligence can protect children as they get on and off the bus — at least in cities that allow school districts to install life-saving technology. 
Photo: T Dorante, CC

The Shifting Nature of Terror on U.S. Transit

By Kea Wilson | Sep 12, 2022 | No Comments
There are more violent terrorist attacks against transit in the U.S. than in any other economically advanced country, a new study finds — but those incidents are more likely to be antisocial and random than criminally or politically motivated, raising thorny questions about what officials should do to save lives.
Photo: Sam Balto

Epic 150-Kid ‘Bike Bus’ Shows America a Better Way to Get to School

By Kea Wilson | Sep 8, 2022 | No Comments
A viral video of hundreds of students biking to school together shows how to give more kids the opportunity to get to school on their own two wheels.
Image: Pixabay

Three Reasons So Many Drivers Leave Pedestrians and Bicyclists to Die

By Kea Wilson | Sep 8, 2022 | No Comments
A spate of pedestrian and cyclists deaths at the hands of hit-and-run drivers in St. Louis is sparking a national conversation about the unique reasons why so many drivers leave their victims to die — and what it will take to stop them.
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