American public transport faces a post-pandemic reckoning
Temporary problems risk permanently putting many passengers off
For most of the past decade, Doug Anderson, a bartender, has commuted the 40 minutes from his home in Logan Square in north-western Chicago to his workplace in Streeterville, in the centre, on the city’s L train. When his shift ends at 4am he shuts up and heads home. But increasingly, he says, getting back is “a nightmare”. At those hours, trains run infrequently; these days they often fail to show up at all, meaning lengthy waits. Mr Anderson’s journey often takes twice as long. He does not always feel safe on empty platforms in the early hours, so he sometimes carries a knife.
This article appeared in the United States section of the print edition under the headline “Derailed”
United States July 23rd 2022
- American climate policy is in tatters
- Is America growing weary of the long war in Ukraine?
- American public transport faces a post-pandemic reckoning
- A report sheds light on the deadliest school shooting in Texas’s history
- America’s already-dreadful maternal mortality rate looks set to rise
- The January 6th committee has hobbled Donald Trump
More from United States
Tom Homan, unleashed
America’s new border czar spent decades waiting for a president like Donald Trump
An unfinished election may shape a swing state’s future
A Supreme Court race ended very close. Then the lawyers arrived.
Donald Trump cries “invasion” to justify an immigration crackdown
His executive orders range from benign to belligerent
To end birthright citizenship, Donald Trump misreads the constitution
A change would also create huge practical problems
Ross Ulbricht, pardoned by Donald Trump, was a pioneer of crypto-crime
His dark website, the Silk Road, was to crime what Napster was to music