Skip to Content
Streetsblog Los Angeles home
Streetsblog Los Angeles home
Log In
Streetsblog.net

A National Look at Meyer’s Exhibit – Mobility as a Basic Human Right

Advocates of sustainable transportation are sometimes charged with elitism and criticized for being out of touch with the mainstream of America. A new exhibit of photographs showing in Los Angeles, "Without a Car in the World:
100 Car-Less Angelenos Tell Stories of Living in LA," graphically makes
the point that the people who have the most to gain from effective
public transportation and complete streets are hardly the elite.

Stephen Box, author of the SoapBoxLA
blog, was featured in the exhibit along with his wife, Enci. Box lives
without a car by choice. But he said when he attended the opening of
the exhibit he was "humbled" by the stories of others in his city who
don't drive because they can't, for medical or economic reasons. Box
writes:

86991698_97aac7e9aa.jpgWaiting for the bus in Los Angeles. (Photo: Thomas Hawk via Flickr.)

[T]he story that established the baseline against which the success of
LA's transportation system must be judged was told by a gentlemen who
simply explained "I'm on the bus six, seven hours a day. MTA doesn't
see what we see, they need to come from behind the desk, take a two- or
three-day trip, get on all the buses, see how they aren't on schedule,
they're always crowded ..."

LA's
weakest and most vulnerable community members live in fear, sometimes
unable to simply cross the street. If LA is to become a Great City, it
will start with a commitment to mobility as a civil right, a basic
guarantee of effective transportation choices that extends to everybody.

Box's
post is an important reminder for sustainable transportation advocates.
It is vital to remember that access to affordable public
transportation, as well as safe pedestrian and bicycle infrastructure,
is a fundamental social equity issue. There's nothing elitist about it.

More from the Streetsblog Network: Systemic Failure wants to get bike lanes out of the gutter. Tucson Bike Lawyer wonders if drivers only get charged for making an improper turn if they end up hitting a police officer. And Biking in LA reports on the opening testimony in a particularly frightening vehicular assault case.

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog Los Angeles

This Week In Livable Streets

Active Streets Mission-to-Mission, LAPD reports on its use of force in 2023, Pasadena Transit plans, Metro subway construction, and more

April 22, 2024

CicLAvia Opens Venice Boulevard – Open Thread

CicLAvia opened six miles of Venice Boulevard - from Culver City Station to Venice Beach

April 22, 2024

LAPD shoots, strikes unarmed unhoused man as he walks away from them at Chesterfield Square Park

The newly released briefing video depicts Robles as non-compliant and claims officer Gomez-Magallanes shot him for pointing a weapon at officers, but body cam footage shows Gomez-Magallanes continued to fire at - and ultimately hit - Robles after he turned away and tossed the BB gun aside.

April 20, 2024
See all posts