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captainjman2to World News•Hongkongers gather at Victoria Harbour as mainland China’s home-grown C919 passenger jet soars above cityEnglish42·2 years agoLol thanks to corporate espionage
captainjman2to News•US$280 in China, US$8,892 in the US: new Chinese cancer drug gets FDA approvalEnglish122·2 years agoWelcome to America! Where money is king.
captainjman2OPMto Chicago•Recommended changes to public transit could be on the tableEnglish11·2 years agoA group tasked with making recommendations about the future of public transit is weighing changes to fares, sales taxes and the very concept of maintaining the CTA, Metra and Pace as separate agencies. The ideas are on the table as the Chicago Metropolitan Agency for Planning prepares a report to lawmakers recommending changes to public transit service and funding. CMAP was tasked by the legislature with presenting the report by the start of 2024, as the region’s three public transit agencies face a looming $730 million budget hole once federal COVID-19 relief funding runs out in the coming years.
Final recommendations are still in the works, as community organizations and representatives continue to meet to hash out proposals which will then have to go through two rounds of CMAP approval. But Wednesday, CMAP provided a public update on the process to Metra board members, offering a window into some of the proposals under consideration that could shape the future of public transit in the Chicago area.
“If we want to have a strong economy in this region, we need a transit system that supports that,” said Laura Wilkison, senior director and policy adviser at CMAP. Once finalized and sent to the state legislature, lawmakers will be able to choose which of the recommendations to enact. Some, including any increases to taxes, are likely to be politically unpopular.
Among the proposals under consideration are service changes such as improvements to the bus system and boosting compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act. They include adding “transit ambassadors” to boost safety, and moving to a one fare system across all types of public transit, rather than the current, separate fares for the CTA, Metra and Pace.
The proposals also include calling on the transit agencies to do their part by raising fares, combined with more funding for existing free and reduced-fare programs, expanding subsidies to include lower-income riders, and other measures to keep fares affordable.
The committees hashing out the proposals are eyeing three potential sets of recommendations that come with different pricetags, ranging from $500 million to $1.5 billion in new public funding. All also call for either $200 million or $250 million from the transit agencies through fare revenue or savings. They could recommend the additional public funding include more state money for existing free and reduced-fare programs, which the state currently only partially funds, and increased money for ADA paratransit service.
They are eyeing expanding the sales tax to include some types of services — though it would not include taxes on housing, utilities or health care, Wilkison said — and potentially also raising the rate that goes to Chicago-area transit, though that could be paired with lowering the rate in the rest of the state. But expanding the sales tax alone won’t raise enough money, Wilkison said. The committee is considering other types of funding, including more fees on drivers such as a surcharge on vehicle registration costs that would go directly to transit.
“It is a full mobility system and you need people on transit in order for them to not be on the road, so it really is a benefit to both roadway users and transit riders for our transit system to work,” Wilkison said. The service and funding changes would likely be paired with recommendations to change the way transit is overseen in the region. Currently, the CTA, Metra and Pace are each operated by a separate agency, and the Regional Transportation Authority coordinates financing.
The recommendations could include simply strengthening the RTA and keeping the separate agencies, or folding the three transit agencies into one regional agency. It wouldn’t be the first recommendation to get rid of the region’s three service agencies. In 2013, the then-head of the RTA urged a state task force to consider consolidating the agencies into one, during discussions on transit funding reform.
The following year, a study by a Paris-based research agency found the Chicago area’s transportation system was hamstrung by a proliferation of local governments, the “irrational organizational structure” of the RTA and the service boards, and an antiquated formula by which transit agencies were funded.
Whether consolidating the systems would gain traction this time around remains to be seen. Wilkison said CMAP is gathering reaction from communities and riders as the agency compiles its final set of recommendations. CMAP’s focus on the recommendations will be on transportation reliability, frequency and access, issues that have been key concerns for riders since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. Ensuring those measures will be key to meeting the region’s climate goals, and boosting the economy, Wilkison said.
“That’s really what people want. They want access to transit, reliability and frequency,” she said. “And we’re not going to get to any of those if we can’t fund it appropriately.”
captainjman2OPto Uplifting News•From jail to practicing law, Minnesota attorney scores big winEnglish21·2 years agoYup
captainjman2to Technology•Researchers jailbreak a Tesla to get free in-car feature upgradesEnglish1201·2 years agoYes! Back to jailbreaking!
captainjman2OPtoyoutubemusic•YouTube Music overtakes Apple Music in streaming platform battleEnglish2·2 years agoI’m all in on YT except I do miss the days of Google Play Music. YT Music just is still missing a ton of basic features. One day…
captainjman2OPMto Chicago•Pritzker, lawmakers turn up heat on Biden to OK $1.1B Union Station rehabEnglish1·2 years agoThis would be huge for Chicago!
captainjman2OPMto Chicago•Report: Illinois Has Third Largest Cannabis Market, Some Of The Highest PricesEnglish1·2 years agoGotta go to another state with these high prices… I see you michigan!
I’m using it now with Comed and it’s awesome! So excited!
Is it just me or is it kinda weird that midwest.social’s description says, “A lemmy server for, but not limited to, leftists in the Midwest USA”. I’m not republican but it seems this server doesn’t accept all views and I’m not sure this is the best place for an /r/Chicago replacement. Thoughts?
Where in Europe are you from? Ever visit Chicago?
captainjman2to Fediverse•lemmy.world leads the pack as the #1 most active instance, outpacing the next 5 non-bot instances combined!English3·2 years agoahh fun, it won’t even let me log in.
captainjman2to Lemmy.world Support•[@support](https://lemmy.world/c/support) Hi. Spinning circle problem here. I've created an account an hour ago. It's available under [https://lemmy.world/u/kosmoski](https://lemmy.world/u/kosmoski) h1·2 years agoJust to update my issue. It seems that I may have not verified my email quick enough. So what I did was reset my password with “forgot password”, set the new PW, it will auto log you in and then you can change your email under “settings” to trigger another verify email to be sent. I’m all good now.
captainjman2to Lemmy.world Support•[@support](https://lemmy.world/c/support) Hi. Spinning circle problem here. I've created an account an hour ago. It's available under [https://lemmy.world/u/kosmoski](https://lemmy.world/u/kosmoski) h2·2 years agoThe only way I have been able to log in is via PW reset. If I log out and attempt to log back in my login just spins. Not sure what is causing this.
I gave up. I couldn’t get any traction and midwest.social seemed sketchy.
midwest.social “lemmy server for, but not limited to, leftists in the Midwest USA”
Doesn’t seem like a server open to everyone even though I’m left leaning.
Given how reddit is falling apart more and Lemmy is searchable on Google, I might try to get things more active here again.