Right now, people around the world continue devoloping improved I.C.T. (Information/Communications/Technology systems) We will addressing how communities can restore health where they are now through improved I.C.T. systems.
Mobility and Transportation as a System
- What does mobility as a system really mean?
How is it different from simply building more roads, adding more cars, or improving one form of transportation at a time? - What is broken in the current transportation system?
Where are the biggest failures: congestion, car dependence, unsafe streets, poor public transit, high costs, pollution, land use, lack of access, or disconnected planning? - What systems change is needed now?
What has to change in transportation design, housing, zoning, public transit, freight, street safety, funding, technology, and local decision-making? - Where are the best real-world solutions already working?
Can you point to cities, towns, regions, cooperatives, public agencies, or community-led projects that are proving better mobility systems are possible? - What can people do where they are now?
What are practical first steps for residents, commuters, schools, employers, neighborhood groups, local governments, and small businesses? - How do we move from car dependence to real mobility freedom?
What role should walking, biking, public transit, shared mobility, rail, microtransit, electric vehicles, safe streets, and complete neighborhoods play? - How can transportation improve health, affordability, and quality of life?
What solutions reduce household costs, pollution, crashes, isolation, commute stress, and unequal access to jobs, schools, healthcare, food, and community life? - How should technology be used in mobility systems?
How can apps, data, electrification, route planning, fare systems, autonomous vehicles, and mobility-as-a-service help people without increasing surveillance, exclusion, or corporate control? - What policies, funding, or partnerships would unlock faster progress?
What should transportation agencies, city planners, employers, schools, public health leaders, housing agencies, and community organizations do now? - What is the story people need to hear?
How do we help people move from traffic frustration and transportation stress to seeing mobility as a public service that can create safer, healthier, more connected communities?