David Kelly for MovePGH
Jaxon White | Tribune-Review
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The City of Pittsburgh launched its Move PGH pilot program on Friday by promising to place 100 electric scooters across the neighborhood of Manchester in the near future.
Move PGH is the beginning of the city’s efforts to jump-start its Universal Basic Mobility program. The initiative’s goal is to provide accessibility of up-and-coming modes of transportation such as electric scooters, car-share services and electric mopeds.
“Universal basic mobility is a human right,” said LaShawn Burton-Faulk, executive director of Manchester Citizens Corp. “Easy access to affordable, reliable, convenient transportation services impacts a person’s life more than nearly anything else.”
El Ayuntamiento construirá un parking en la calle Iturritxu
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Retencions de més de 2 quilòmetres per entrar a Andorra des d Espanya
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Pittsburgh to get e-scooter pilot program thanks to provision included in budget bill
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Cities are making covid-era street changes permanent. Some are facing pushback. Michael Laris, Luz Lazo © Toni L. Sandys/The Washington Post People enjoy a stretch of Beach Drive, which was closed to weekday car traffic in April. Many cities that shut streets during the pandemic are looking at how to keep some of the changes in place. (Toni L. Sandys/The Washington Post) Paris barred most cars from the majestic road that goes past the Louvre Museum, then months later announced it would keep it that way. New York followed suit, making permanent a program that clears space on public roads for walking, biking and, in the case of 34th Avenue in Queens, Mexican folk dance classes.