Transportation For People With Disabilities: Summary and Recommendations

Overview

Transportation is a critical issue for people with disabilities and is an essential component of equitable communities.The draft principles and issues outlined  in this summary can serve as a starting point as the workgroup continues their efforts to prioritize issues and create action steps towards change.

Transportation Update: Where We’ve Gone and What We’ve Learned

Overview

For Americans with Disabilities many transportation services remain stuck in neutral.  For many Americans with Disabilities the prospects and possibilities for going to and from work, school and recreational activities are stuck in neutral. NCD’s report addresses the broad range of surface transportation, including these, and makes recommendations policymakers should use to address these barriers promptly.

Can Shared Mobility Help Low-Income People Access Opportunity?

Overview

Shared-mobility programs like bike-share and car-share have significant potential to benefit low-income users, yet often do not reach that population. This report examines the specific opportunities and challenges facing shared mobility programs in expanding services to low-income communities.

The State of Transit in New Orleans: The Need for a More Efficient, Equitable, and Sustainable System

Overview

Ride New Orleans’ analysis in this report highlights several critical findings.

  1. By the end of 2012, just 36% of the pre-Katrina transit service offered by the New Orleans Regional Transit Authority (RTA) in 2005 had been restored – although 86% of New Orleans’ population had returned to the city.
  2. Service reductions have been worst in areas where transit service is needed most: low-income neighborhoods, communities of color, and areas where people have less access to personal vehicles
  3. The RTA’s  is operating at a significant deficit every year and will soon run out of cash reserve funds. Some of the basic causes of the deficit are clear: our transit system costs more to operate than comparable systems and it charges lower fares. Yet, to date, the conversation about correcting the deficit has centered only on a potential fare increase. The findings in this report indicate that any sustainable solution to the deficit will need to involve lowering the costs of service as well as increasing revenues of all types.

Transportation Policy to Build Strong Rural and Tribal Communities

A Sustainable Future: Preserving and Expanding Biking, Walking, and Public Transportation Funding