Published

Women Cite Safety Concerns for Avoiding Public Transit

Women are about half as likely as men to use nearby public transportation, due in part to safety concerns, according to a new study conducted in Los Angeles.
#regulations

Share

Women are about half as likely as men to use nearby public transportation, due in part to safety concerns, according to a new study conducted in Los Angeles.

The use of public transit increased by 4.3% among people surveyed who live within a half mile of California’s Expo light rail line, which connects Los Angeles to Santa Monica, after new stations were opened. But increased usage among female respondents was half that of their male counterparts.

Of the women who said they wouldn’t use nearby transit, one in five cited fear for their safety and/or harassment. Concerns included safety on the train, at the station and the walk to and from it.

The peer-reviewed paper was presented at this month’s Transportation Research Board meeting in Washington, D.C. The study was conducted by researchers from Tamkan University in Taiwan, the University of Southern California and the University of California, Irvine.  

The authors note that steps must be taken to alleviate safety concerns before women will consider public transportation as a more environmentally friendly alternative to other means of transportation.

Other researchers and experts agree, noting that violence and harassment against women is often underreported. They call for more staff at stations, better lighting and making the walk to and from a station safer. The latter can be achieved in part by locating stations closer to public parking, restaurants, bars and other popular meeting places, reports Wired magazine. Another potential option is to offer “Women Only” train cars.

Such innovations are needed to help women feel safer and improve overall as safety as society transitions to multi-modal mobility systems. We forget sometimes that cars offer a level of safety that is not found with mass transit and other emerging environmentally friendly modes of travel.

RELATED CONTENT

  • GM Is Down with Diesels

    General Motors is one company that is clearly embracing the diesel engine.

  • Cobots: 14 Things You Need to Know

    What jobs do cobots do well? How is a cobot programmed? What’s the ROI? We asked these questions and more to four of the leading suppliers of cobots. 

  • Mustang Changes for 2018

    On Tuesday Ford unveiled—using the social media channels of actor Dwayne Johnson (this has got to unnerve some of the auto buff book editors)—the 2018 Mustang, which has undergone some modifications: under the hood (the 3.7-liter V6 is giving way to a 2.3-liter EcoBoost four, and a 10-speed automatic is available), on the dash (a 12-inch, all-digital LCD screen is available for the dashboard), at the tires (12 wheel choices), on the chassis (MagneRide damper technology is being offered with the Mustang Performance Package), and on the exterior (three new paint colors). And while on the subject of the exterior, there are some notable changes—a lower, remodeled hood, repositioned hood vents, new upper and lower front grilles, LED front lights, revised LED taillamps, new rear bumper and fascia.

Gardner Business Media - Strategic Business Solutions