Meghan McCarty Carino
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The contempt directed at e-scooters today remind us of the vitriol that greeted another innovation the automobile.
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And we've got the quiz to prove it.
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The city won't cap the speed of scooters to 12 miles per hour, as was proposed. LA also won't limit the number of companies that can operate.
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New regulations include a cap on the number of devices like scooters that companies like Bird and Lime could operate.
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Discounted transit fares and subsidies for new shared mobility tech, like scooters and ride-share, could help low-income people stay on their feet.
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Four miles of the busy road between downtown Los Angeles and USC has been redesigned with protected or buffered bike lanes, new crosswalks and landscaping.
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Discounted transit fares and subsidies for new shared mobility tech, like scooters and ride-share, could help low-income people stay on their feet.
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It's been five years since the city reduced the four lane road to two lanes and added a center turn lane and two bicycle lanes along the corridor. The project's goal was to reduce fatalities and injuries. A new study looks at what has and has not worked.
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Some city officials want to put the brakes on e-scooters, but others say it's unnecessary to ban the Birds when regulations are already in the works.
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Given the current funding and tax measure restrictions, the project wouldn't even break ground until 2053.
Stories by Meghan McCarty Carino
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