The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

People moving is new frontier

- Llewellyn King is executive producer and host of “White House Chronicle” on PBS. His email is llewellynk­ing1@ gmail.com. He wrote this for InsideSour­ces.com.

I have seen the future of urban life and it wasn’t quite what I expected. It was whizzing all around me in New York City on a recent visit.

My wife and I were there to do that most Christmass­y of things:

See Radio City Music Hall’s Christmas Spectacula­r starring the Rockettes. It is great and you should see it if you can, but it isn’t what bowled me over.

What bowled me over figurative­ly and a couple of times almost literally was the new urban mobility.

I saw the future of city transporta­tion, dashing all around me every time I ventured to cross a street.

Like cities the world over, New York has installed bicycle lanes, but they have been taken over by what might be described as Space Age peoplemove­rs in astounding configurat­ions.

These denizens of the new mobility hurtled by on electric bicycles, electric unicycles, electric skateboard­s, electric, gyroscopic one-wheeled skateboard­s, and, of course, those ubiquitous electric scooters. I didn’t think it was the end of civilizati­on as I have known it. Instead, I longed to be a good deal younger so I, too, could join the transporta­tion revolution.

You may not like this new order, and almost certainly if you are over 50, you’re not ready for

However, it is here, it is happening, and it is the first exciting thing in cities, perhaps since traffic lights.

The future of urban transporta­tion isn’t what supporters of public transit, such as myself, have been advocating for decades: More buses and trains.

City visionarie­s, like Scott Sellars, city manager of Kyle, Texas, a small but rapidly growing city of 60,000 located between Austin and San Antonio, are looking beyond what they call “destinatio­n public transporta­tion” to new ways of moving people or, more exactly, new ways of letting people move themselves.

Kyle has made the bold decision that the future of city transporta­tion belongs not to buses and trains, but rather to ride-sharing companies. It has contracted for Uber to become the city’s main public transporta­tion mode. Sellars explained the concept on Digital 360, a Texas State University weekly webinar on which I am a regular panelist.

Sellars told me Kyle has a subsidized contract with Uber to take care of those unable to afford its fares. Residents qualifying for assistance get a voucher and an app on their cell phones and can make any local journey for a standard $3.14. There are even vouchers for the unbanked. But there isn’t a way yet to use the service if you don’t have a cell phone or access to one.

To avoid having to take lanes away from cars, Kyle has been able to build an alternativ­e system called the Vybe, which is 12-feet-wide and can accommodat­e all people-movers, including golf carts, bicycles, and all those electric-powered wheels which are now running around New York.

There are charging stations for golf carts and other electric transporte­rs on the Vybe. The Vybe runs most places people might want to go and doubles as a right of way for utilities of all kinds.

While many of us have thought the smart cities were going to be about super-electric connectivi­ty, few of us realized the first tranche of city smartness would come with new forms of transporta­tion, usurping or challengin­g the car, bus, and train.

The transporta­tion revolution isn’t confined to the surface of cities.

Elon Musk’s Boring Company continues to plow ahead with fast, subterrane­an tunnels, now being implemente­d in Las Vegas and studied in Los Angeles, Miami, and many other cities. Look up, too.

There is a profusion of companies working on drone-like, urban sky taxis which will whip you from your home to an airport or office tower.

Above the ground, on the ground, and under the ground, urban mobility is itself on the move.

Hold onto your hat.

The future of urban transporta­tion isn’t what supporters of public transit, such as myself, have been advocating for decades: More buses and trains.

 ?? Llewellyn King ??
Llewellyn King

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