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Noah Kazis

Noah joined Streetsblog as a New York City reporter at the start of 2010. When he was a kid, he collected subway paraphernalia in a Vignelli-map shoebox. Before coming to Streetsblog, he blogged at TheCityFix DC and worked as a field organizer for the Obama campaign in Toledo, Ohio. Noah graduated from Yale University, where he wrote his senior thesis on the class politics of transportation reform in New York City. He lives in Morningside Heights.

Recent Posts

Report: Investing in Transit Could Create 180,000 Jobs, for Free

By Noah Kazis | Sep 3, 2010 | No Comments
Between calls for renewed stimulus on the one hand and for deficit reduction on the other, Washington, D.C. is stuck. A new report by the Transportation Equity Network, however, shows one easy way out of that political stalemate: shifting our transportation spending to transit. According to the report, written by University of Missouri-St. Louis researchers […]

APTA Report Prescribes Public Transport to Improve Public Health

By Noah Kazis | Aug 19, 2010 | No Comments
Transit use is correlated with decreases in the number of traffic crashes. Image: "Evaluating Public Transportation Health Benefits" A new report written by the Victoria Transport Policy Institute’s Todd Litman for the American Public Transit Association [PDF], the trade organization for the nation’s transit agencies, reminds us that one of the most valuable benefits of […]

Delaware Gov Signs Bill to Protect Cyclists and Pedestrians

By Noah Kazis | Aug 13, 2010 | No Comments
Delaware governor Jack Markell signs the state’s vulnerable users law yesterday. Photo: WHYY Yesterday brought a big victory for street safety and traffic justice in Delaware, as Governor Jack Markell signed SB 269, the state’s vulnerable users law. Jeff Peel, writing on the League of American Bicyclists blog, explains: The bill, modeled after an Oregon […]

Chicago Commuter Rail Spends Big on Trucking

By Noah Kazis | Aug 11, 2010 | No Comments
Chicago’s commuter rail agency will be raising this bridge to help trucks pass underneath, relying exclusively on transit funding. Photo: The Urbanophile Transit funding these days is, needless to say, scarce. Across the country, transit agencies are slashing services to cope with the gaping fiscal holes left by the recession. More than ever, every dollar […]

House Approves Transpo Spending Bill After Stripping Out $ for Livability

By Noah Kazis | Jul 30, 2010 | 2 Comments
Congressmen Oberstar and Blumenauer, here speaking together at the 2007 Bike Summit, were on opposite sides of a dispute about increased funding for livability programs yesterday. Photo: Bike Portland The House of Representatives passed its 2011 appropriations bill for Transportation and Housing and Urban Development yesterday, significantly increasing the amount going to both highways and […]

500 Square Miles Lost to New Jersey Sprawl Over 20 Years

By Noah Kazis | Jul 30, 2010 | No Comments
New development in New Jersey’s Warren County. Image: John Hasse via Planners Web. The last decade has often been heralded as a "back to the cities" moment, a time when Americans have been excited to return to the walkable lifestyle many abandoned two generations before. A new report from New Jersey’s Rutgers and Rowan Universities […]

Sales Tax Hike Could Save Olympia’s Transit System

By Noah Kazis | Jul 28, 2010 | No Comments
If transit supporters don’t turn out at the polls, service in Thurston County will plummet by about 25 percent compared to levels made possible by a small sales tax hike. Image: Seattle Transit Blog It may be the middle of summer, but if you’re paying attention, it’s already election season. With a string of primaries […]

More Space for Parking Than Offices at Boston-Area TOD

By Noah Kazis | Jul 26, 2010 | No Comments
A proposal to build new office and residential space near the end of Boston’s Green Line will also triple the amount of parking at the station. Photo: HelveticaFanatic/Flickr Another city, another would-be transit-oriented development undermined by a glut of parking. This time it’s Newton, Massachusetts, where plans are underway to build 420,000 square feet of […]

FTA: American Transit Systems Need $77.7 Billion in Repairs

By Noah Kazis | Jul 22, 2010 | 9 Comments
Transit systems need billions of dollars to reach a state of good repair. Image: FTA Americans who ride trains and buses are suffering the effects of a huge maintenance backlog, according to a new study by the Federal Transit Administration [PDF]. It would take a down payment of $77.7 billion to bring the nation’s transit […]

Finding the Buses That Need a Speed Boost

By Noah Kazis | Jul 21, 2010 | No Comments
Mapping bus speeds in Washington, D.C. Slower lines show up as dark blue. Image: Greater Greater Washington A fresh look at old information can sometimes be all you need to better understand a knotty problem. And a fresh look is exactly what the Washington Metropolitan Area Transportation Authority provided with a new set of bus […]

Atlanta Releases Nation’s Largest Survey of Transit Riders

By Noah Kazis | Jul 19, 2010 | No Comments
Atlanta’s transit riders tend to be lower-income residents, a new survey shows. Image: Atlanta Regional Commission Who takes transit? That’s what the Atlanta Regional Commission is trying to figure out with what it calls the largest-ever survey of riders in the United States. The commission spoke to 50,000 transit riders, a full ten percent of […]

Senators Aim to Reintroduce Transportation Into Climate Bill Debate

By Noah Kazis | Jul 16, 2010 | 2 Comments
Sen. Jeff Merkley projects that his legislation would allow the United States to almost completely stop importing oil, primarily by reforming our transportation system. Image: Office of Sen. Merkley [PDF]. As the threat of a Republican filibuster continues to prevent the Senate from passing climate legislation, leading Democrats have tried to scale back their proposal […]
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