Transit in Transition @ UCLA
The UCLA Arrowhead Symposium: Transit in Transition reconvened in person at UCLA on April 1, 2022 after a successful online series this past fall.
At our first in-person program sessions in 2.5 years, we highlighted the work from the UCLA Institute of Transportation Studies Public Transit Initiative and its Public Transit and Shared Mobility Recovery program. Other topics included:
On-Demand Learning
Transit in Transition @ UCLA is archived on YouTube for on-demand learning.
Each tab below includes links to verify your completion of an on-demand learning video and register your credits with the American Planning Association. A total of 4.75 hours of on-demand AICP CM credits are offered through the on-demand series. Participants who registered and attended the April 1 event should claim credits.
Sessions
Public transit moves people where they need to go. But shifts in how people live, work, and play will change these destinations. Recent changes in state housing policy and greater enforcement of existing policies will bring more new housing near transit and jobs. Substitution of remote work for commuting – and the greater decentralization of office space – are key factors driving transit demand beyond the existing fixed-route transit infrastructure that goes into serving these markets today.
On-demand AICP credits
Los Angeles has sought to reinvent its transportation system. Two years into the pandemic, six years from the Olympic Games, and after two years of rising traffic deaths: How is this reinvention faring? Will issues related to public workforce, transit demand, mobility competition, and transportation system pricing accelerate or rein in this transformation?
On-demand AICP credits
2022 brings a historically unique position for transit agencies — they are temporarily flush with funding. Availability of operator labor, rather than funding, is the key constraint in providing transit service for many agencies. Can state or federal policy help close the labor shortage, or are other changes needed? Do transit agencies need to consider diversifying funding sources as a contingency if federal funding for operations falls back to pre-pandemic levels?
On-demand AICP credits
In 2018, the UCLA Arrowhead Symposium considered the changing nature of transportation and new mobility services. Many of these new mobility services have evolved or withered during the multiple shocks brought by COVID: economic, health concerns, and travel activity. What do we know about these changes and what does it mean for transit’s future?
On-demand AICP credits