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Kea Wilson

Recent Posts

Photo: Kimchi, CC

Opinion: Slow Transportation Should Be a Human Right

By Kea Wilson | Aug 12, 2022 | No Comments
American culture, and particularly American transportation culture, is profoundly rooted in the idea that traveling fast is best — because if we don't, that culture insists, we won't be able to make or spend money efficiently enough to retain our position as a global economic superpower. But it doesn't have to be that way — and we don't have to live in a dromocracy. Here's why.
Photo: Gage Skidmore, cc

RAISE Grants to Fund Complete Streets in Nearly Every State

By Kea Wilson | Aug 11, 2022 | No Comments
The first recipients of a newly expanded major transportation grant program will deliver significant money for biking, walking and transit — and even some road projects that federal transportation leaders say will help non-drivers, too.
Photo: Pxhere, CC

The Brake: What Would the ‘Post-Automobility’ Future Look Like?

By Kea Wilson | Aug 10, 2022 | No Comments
Last time on the Brake, we chatted with authors Robert Braun and Richard Randell about why automobility isn't really about cars at all — and how it's become what they call a "totalitarian system" that touches virtually every part of our lives. 
Rep. Jackie Walorski (R-Ind.) was killed with her driver Zach Potts (inset), who had tweeted aggressively. Photo: U.S. House of Representatives

Congresswoman’s Driver in Fatal Crash Had History of Troubling Tweets About Driving

By Kea Wilson | Aug 9, 2022 | No Comments
A 27-year-old staffer with a history of troubling tweets about fast driving was behind the wheel during the crash that killed Rep. Jackie Walorski, according to a revised police statement — and that raises troubling questions.
Photo: Henry Be, CC

The Problem With EV ‘Acoustic Vehicle Alerting Systems’ That No One Is Talking About

By Kea Wilson | Aug 5, 2022 | No Comments
Countless marginalized U.S. communities, though, are already being annoyed by car noise —and experts say that may not change even if every vehicle on the road were electrified overnight.
An electric car is still a car. Photo: Steve Jurvetson, CC

Instead of Just Buying American EVs, Let’s Buy an American Path Out of Car Dependency

By Kea Wilson | Aug 4, 2022 | No Comments
Automakers are warning that they won't be able to meet demand for electric cars while also divesting from foreign supply chains — prompting some advocates to demand a decarbonization strategy that doesn't require 1,000-pound batteries.
Photo:Shilpy Arora, CC

Advocates: Cutting High Speed Rail Out of Climate Bill Was a Mistake

By Kea Wilson | Aug 3, 2022 | No Comments
The Democrats' decision to axe high speed rail from the climate bill has some advocates wondering what it will take for lawmakers to finally understand the environmentally transformative potential of the mode.
This vehicle has pedals, a battery-powered motor, three wheels, and a top speed of 20 miles per hour. So is it an "e-bike"? Photo: Electrek

What Is An ‘E-Bike’ Anyway — And Where Does it Belong on the Road?

By Kea Wilson | Aug 3, 2022 | No Comments
See that three-wheeler speeding along? Yes, our nation will be better off once we're all driving those instead of cars and SUVs. But until then, American cities aren't sure where they should go — the bike lane, the road, or somewhere else entirely. 
Photo: Pexels, CC

Three GOP Senators Want to Protect Motorists’ Right to Drive Drunk

By Kea Wilson | Aug 1, 2022 | No Comments
A new bill from three Senate Republicans would repeal a law that aimed to end drunk driving.
Senator Joe Manchin. Photo: Third Way, CC

What’s in the New ‘Climate’ Deal for Sustainable Transport — And What’s Not

By Kea Wilson | Jul 29, 2022 | No Comments
The Senate is on the brink of passing one of the most robust climate spending bills in U.S. history — but sustainable transportation advocates say it won't do enough to decarbonize the transportation sector.
Twitter account @betterstreetsai visualizes what the Brooklyn Queens Expressway could look like if it were covered over removed and replaced with a lush park.

This Artificial Intelligence Bot is Designing Better Streets Than Some Engineers

By Kea Wilson | Jul 28, 2022 | No Comments
A New York artist is breaking through Americans' willful inability to imagine how their communities could be designed around people instead of automobiles.
Automatic cyclist and pedestrian counters aren't common in U.S. cities — but they should be. Photo: The Fast Lane Blog (with help from the Streetsblog Photoshop Desk)

Why Cities Are So Bad at Counting Bicyclists — And Why it Matters

By Kea Wilson | Jul 27, 2022 | No Comments
Until cities harness big data, they could remain in the dark about how to best support some of the most vulnerable users on the road, a new study argues.
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