Verbal and physical assaults against transit operators have grown alarmingly in the last decade.

A General Directive issued by the Federal Transit Administration (FTA) requires transit agencies to address violence against transit workers. “The General Directive is necessary because from 2013 to 2021, the National Transit Database (NTD) documented a 120 percent increase in the number of assaults against transit workers,” according to a FTA press release.
As U.S. Transportation Deputy Secretary Polly Trottenberg noted, “Over the past decade, we’ve seen a tragic and unacceptable rise in verbal and physical assaults on the men and women who are critical in providing a transportation lifeline for millions of people.”
Over 700 agencies subject to FTA’s Public Transportation Agency Safety Plans (PTASP) regulation must complete a series of actions including conducting a risk assessment, identifying strategies to mitigate risk, and reporting to the FTA. “Every transit agency serving a large, urbanized area (with a population of more than 200,000 people) must comply with PTASP requirements to involve the joint labor-management Safety Committee when identifying safety risk mitigations and strategies.”
FULL STORY: Biden-Harris Administration Requires Transit Agencies Nationwide to Address Assaults Against Transit Workers

Rethinking Redlining
For decades we have blamed 100-year-old maps for the patterns of spatial racial inequity that persist in American cities today. An esteemed researcher says: we’ve got it all wrong.

Planetizen Federal Action Tracker
A weekly monitor of how Trump’s orders and actions are impacting planners and planning in America.

California High-Speed Rail's Plan to Right Itself
The railroad's new CEO thinks he can get the project back on track. The stars will need to align this summer.

San Francisco Muni Raises Fares a Second Time
A 10–cent fare hike for adults is part of the agency’s plan to chip away at a growing budget deficit.

Electric Grid Capacity Could Hamstring EV Growth
Industry leaders say the U.S. electric grid is unprepared for the increased demand for power created by electric cars, data centers, and electric homes.

Texas Bill Supports Adaptive Reuse in Commercial Areas
Senate Bill 840, which was preliminarily approved by the state House, would allow residential construction in areas previously zoned for offices and commercial uses.
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