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Title: How Equitable Is Bikesharing? Exploring Population Characteristics and Access to Employment
Accession Number: 01658479
Record Type: Component
Abstract: Public bikesharing systems have grown considerably over the last several years, but face criticism for serving primarily a White, affluent residential population. But almost no study has explored whether bikesharing systems similar serve disproportionately high-status employment. This study explores the equity implications of residential and employment characteristics in the service areas of 29 bikesharing systems in the United States. The author finds that consistent with prior research, block groups within a five-minute walk of bicycle stations have a significantly higher proportion of White residents compared to those within a 3200-m radius. There are more mixed results when examining rates of poverty and English proficiency, but systems serve a higher proportion of zero-vehicle households. The author finds consistent results that almost all bikesharing systems serve significantly more higher-income, higher-skilled jobs. The findings suggest that equitable access to employment will be hard to achieve even with targeted inclusion efforts to lower-income person-of-color communities. System planners should rely on integration with public transit to achieve access equity goals.
Supplemental Notes: This paper was sponsored by TRB committee ANF20 Standing Committee on Bicycle Transportation.
Report/Paper Numbers: 18-05949
Language: English
Authors: Barajas, Jesus MPublication Date: 2018
Conference:
Transportation Research Board 97th Annual Meeting
Location:
Washington DC, United States Media Type: Digital/other
Features: Figures; Maps; References; Tables
TRT Terms: Subject Areas: Operations and Traffic Management; Pedestrians and Bicyclists; Planning and Forecasting; Society
Source Data: Transportation Research Board Annual Meeting 2018 Paper #18-05949
Files: TRIS, TRB, ATRI
Created Date: Jan 8 2018 11:32AM
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