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Reuters The mayor wants the city to run buses on Saturdays, but traditionalists oppose the move as a slippery slope.
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Speeding Tickets for Going 26 MPH
A flood of new cameras in Chicago aims to slow motorists driving near schools.
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How Public Perception of Light Rail Influences Its Economic Benefits
Negative stereotypes of light rail — in particular its unsubstantiated ability to generate crime — may have hurt property values along a new line in south Jersey, according to a new study.
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Motion-Activated Pothole Sensors ... In Your Phone
Boston hopes its driver-operated Street Bump app will grow sensitive enough to detect cracks in the pavement before they become gravel-spewing craters.
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Can Subways Ever Really Be Rat-Free?
In New York, legislators debate whether a bill banning food will cut down on the city's vermin.
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Urban Wonk
We Need 'Broken Windows' for Traffic Crimes
There's outrage in New York City over how many drivers get away with killing people every year. Here's one idea to help save lives.
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In Cleveland, a Historic Building May Be Reborn...as a Parking Lot
Owners hope to add parking spaces inside a former department store.
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In San Francisco, Buses Become the Police
After a successful pilot program, the entire fleet will soon be equipped with cameras to ticket cars that block transit-only traffic.
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The Hidden Cost of Africa's Air Traffic Boom
New routes are springing up across the continent. Is this a good thing for Africans?
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Photos
What We Can Learn From Urban Nostalgia
Artifacts from the past can teach us a lot about walkable, transit-oriented spaces.
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Can Nashville Shake Its Sprawling Past?
It's the nation's most spread-out city. Can an ambitious new transportation plan change that?
