• ℕ𝕖𝕞𝕠
    link
    fedilink
    58 months ago

    That’d be great, yeah. But scope is the issue.

    “All Chicagoans have the right to public transit.” Sane and doable. Not done, not currently, as any map of the city will show you, but both possible and desirable.

    “All Illinoisans have a right to public transit.” I’d love to see it, even if it’s just once-a-day trains to Springfield, to St. Louis, to the Region, to Milwaukee, to Rockford, to Peoria, to Chambana. But that’s a lot more train lines than we have now, and that means land for stations and RoWs, it means manpower and materials for maintenance, it means working out the logistics of scheduling and fare pricing for the communities being served. And it still won’t cover everyone unless augmented with bus lines, which also need logistics, manpower, and maintenance. Still desirable; not very efficient, especially for a perpetually cash-strapped state like Illinois.

    “All Americans have a right to public transit.” At that point it’d be empty words, doing more harm than good.

    “All humans have a right to public transit.” At this point, purely aspirational rather than descriptive.

    • @Nouveau_Burnswick
      link
      188 months ago

      Perhaps something like this

      In Switzerland, minimum frequency standards for public transport are enshrined in law – meaning each citizen can expect regular provision of bus and train services, even in rural areas. It is administrated at local level, with each of the country’s ‘cantons’ setting out a framework for delivery.

      In the Zurich canton, for instance, which is roughly comparable with South Yorkshire, England, and includes both urban and rural areas, villages of 300 people or more are guaranteed a bus service at least every hour. In the Bern canton, which is less densely populated than Devon, small villages get at least four and up to 15 return bus services each day.

      In both places, schedules are aligned with railway timetables to ensure citizens can travel short or long distances with ease. Accessibility for disabled passengers is also a legal requirement.

      • HubertManne
        link
        fedilink
        28 months ago

        I mean it might make sense if population density is taken into account

        • @Nouveau_Burnswick
          link
          38 months ago

          Exactly. Canada/USA won’t have the same regulations as Switzerland, but we can certainly have similar regulations.

    • @[email protected]OP
      link
      fedilink
      48 months ago

      The article is speaking from a British perspective, so that isn’t really a problem. I do think that such a limit on density or some other metric. It should be more that every town and village has a public transport connection, rather than every rural farmhouse.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    -28 months ago

    This is why I sub here. For ARTICLES. Mods, can we please ban all meme posts?

    Just imagine if all content was actually articles here…

  • @Mr_Blott
    link
    -128 months ago

    We do

    What you on about?

      • @Mr_Blott
        link
        -88 months ago

        Your headline suggests something that is patently false. I have the right to public transport and I have it

        Or do you mean a very specific “we”?

        • @SpaceNoodle
          link
          118 months ago

          Ah, the classic “fuck you, got mine.”

        • @Nouveau_Burnswick
          link
          48 months ago

          The “we” would be everyone who is not the “37 per cent of urban areas globally, and just 52 per cent of the urban population, [who] have convenient access to public transport.”