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Kea Wilson

Recent Posts

Kansas City, Mo. clears the way for a freeway, 1957. Source: Source: Missouri Valley Special Collections, Kansas City Public Library.

Highway Removal Basically Axed from Bipartisan Deal

By Kea Wilson | Aug 2, 2021 | No Comments
Advocates are rallying to restore funding for a visionary highway removal program that was all but entirely removed during the bipartisan infrastructure negotiations.
Image: Paris Malone, CC

Infrastructure Deal 'Worst Transit Ratio in Decades'

By Kea Wilson | Jul 30, 2021 | No Comments
Washington is one step closer to passing an infrastructure package that would provide historic funding for transit, and then immediately undercut it with historic funding for drivers.
A street in North Baltimore, Md. with a badly damaged sidewalk. A series of orange construction barrels mark an uneven segment of alleyway pavement between two curb cuts that is filled with dried mud and would likely be impassible to many people using assistive devices. Parking lots and brick row homes stand in the background.  Image: Max Pixel, CC

Why City Sidewalks Still Miss the ADA Mark

By Kea Wilson | Jul 28, 2021 | No Comments
People with mobility challenges in Baltimore, Md. are celebrating the 31st anniversary of the Americans with Disability Act this week by filing a lawsuit demanding their city actually follow the historic law  — and communities across the country could be the target of similar lawsuits soon.
Image: Gage Skidmore, CC

Advocates Call for Action on Infrastructure Bill

By Kea Wilson | Jul 27, 2021 | No Comments
The Senate may be on the brink of slashing the nation’s core transit funding at a moment when many hoped the mode would finally get its due — unless advocates speak out.
Greg Knapp coaches JaMarcus Russell of the Oakland Raiders. Image: BrokenSphere, CC

New York Jets Asst. Coach Killed by Driver

By Kea Wilson | Jul 26, 2021 | No Comments
The death of the beloved New York Jets assistant coach has sparked an outpouring among football fans and outrage among street-safety advocates.
Image: Flickr, CC

Americans Want Green School Buses

By Kea Wilson | Jul 26, 2021 | No Comments
Most Americans agree its past time to green the nation's fleet of yellow school buses, a new survey finds — but Congress keeps whittling down funding for this common sense, bipartisan priority. 
Image: Patrick Leitner, CC

Study: Bikeshare Saves the U.S. $36 Million Every Year

By Kea Wilson | Jul 23, 2021 | No Comments
More than 40 percent of the savings accounted for by the study ($15 million) were thanks to the Big Apple alone.
The authors cycle in their adopted hometown of Delft, NL. Image courtesy of Modacity.

Four Myths About Car-Light Cities, Busted

By Kea Wilson | Jul 21, 2021 | No Comments
Authors Melissa and Chris Bruntlett clear up some of the most common misconceptions about the Dutch cycling model that some say should be exported to America.
Image: Tony Webster, CC

Why U.S. Car Crash Reporting Is Broken

By Kea Wilson | Jul 20, 2021 | No Comments
Nearly a third of car crashes involving a vulnerable road user goes unreported in the nation's capital, skewing District crash totals that are critical to making changes — but advocates say that stunning stat is just the tip of a much larger national iceberg.
This stretch of North Grand Boulevard in St. Louis, MO, was ranked among the most dangerous corridors in the country for walkers. Image:  Mission STL

The Most Dangerous Roads in America for Walkers

By Kea Wilson | Jul 19, 2021 | No Comments
Three quarters of the most fatal roads in America for pedestrians are located in low-income neighborhoods, a new study finds — and they overwhelmingly share a handful of notoriously dangerous design characteristics that communities can and must eliminate on any corridor where residents are expected to walk. 
Image: Screenshot from NBC4 Washington

D.C. Ped Bridge Collapse Subject of Controversy

By Kea Wilson | Jul 16, 2021 | No Comments
The mayor of Washington, D.C. has announced that the city will rebuild a recently-destroyed pedestrian bridge that runs over an urban highway, so far ignoring calls from advocates to more radically reimagine the road that has become a symbol of systemic racism in the region — and setting a troubling precedent for other cities that might be compelled to rethink walking infrastructure that puts the convenience of drivers first.

'Human Infrastructure' Bill May Offer Big EV Subsidies

By Kea Wilson | Jul 15, 2021 | No Comments
The massive infrastructure package announced on Tuesday promises to pump hundreds of billions into affordable housing and other policies that will make active transportation a viable option for more Americans — but it may also include big money for electric vehicles with little for other modes.
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