Lessons Learned from Covid-19: Strategies to Enhance Racial and Social Equity Through Public Transportation As A Community Lifeline
During a pandemic or other crises, communities are critically dependent on essential functions and services that are recognized as lifelines. Community lifelines (e.g., energy; health and medical; food, water, and waste management; and communications and essential mobility) enable coordination and increase societal well-being during crisis response and recovery. Communities cannot be resilient unless these lifelines work effectively. Low-income communities and communities of color faced compounding disparities due to their curtailed mobility from transit service cuts and from greater vulnerabilities to contract the virus. Essential workers were recognized as the backbone of society and became among the most at risk to infection from the Covid-19, in part because they were required to work in person and travel to do so. Public transportation agencies and other transportation providers are now attempting to restore service cuts, improve resilience, and prepare for future crises. Important questions must be answered, such as how should transit services be modified during crises to maintain community lifelines. This research will help ensure that the positive and negative lessons learned regarding low-income communities and communities of color during the Covid-19 pandemic are documented and understood. OBJECTIVE: The objective of this research is to present strategies to enhance racial and social equity through providing essential travel and community lifelines for low-income communities and communities of color during disasters. The research should focus on serving essential travel needs by people throughout the United States who rely on public transportation for work, health care, food, education, caregiving, and childcare trips. The target audiences for this research include public transportation providers and their public, private and non-profit partners at local, regional, state, and national levels.
- Record URL:
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Supplemental Notes:
- The panel has approved the draft final deliverables. The final deliverables are expected fall 2024.
Language
- English
Project
- Status: Active
- Funding: $350000
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Contract Numbers:
Project H-60
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Sponsor Organizations:
Transit Cooperative Research Program
Transportation Research Board
500 Fifth Street, NW
Washington, DC 20001Federal Transit Administration
1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE
Washington, DC United States 20590 -
Project Managers:
Schwager, Dianne
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Performing Organizations:
One Penn Plaza
250 W 34th Street
New York, New York United States 10119 -
Principal Investigators:
Matherly, Deb
- Start Date: 20211101
- Expected Completion Date: 20241231
- Actual Completion Date: 0
Subject/Index Terms
- TRT Terms: COVID-19; Ethnic groups; Lessons learned; Low income groups; Minorities; Public transit; Social impacts; Transportation equity; Travel demand
- Subject Areas: Planning and Forecasting; Public Transportation; Security and Emergencies; Society;
Filing Info
- Accession Number: 01758959
- Record Type: Research project
- Source Agency: Transportation Research Board
- Contract Numbers: Project H-60
- Files: TRB, RIP
- Created Date: Nov 23 2020 7:46PM