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A short guide to ‘transportation health equity’

Buffered Bike Lane with a bike symbol and arrow pointing forward


This map, created by PSU researchers in September 2009, shows bikeway network gaps. Areas with green outlines have high minority populations.
(From Equity Gap Analysis of Portland’s draft Bicycle Master PlanPDF)


The concept of equity has been steadily gaining awareness and respect in the transportation field. In short, equity has to do with making sure that the transportation system serves all populations equally; but there’s much more to it than that. A new guide on the topic and an event in Portland next month are just the latest signs that equity in transportation is an idea whose time has come.

Portland-based non-profit Upstream Public Health has recently published Transportation Health Equity Principles, a helpful guide that explains the concept greater detail.

At the root of equity are people. Here’s Upstream’s description of who is impacted by “transportation inequity”:

“People of color, people experiencing poverty, people with disabilities, and people who experience language barriers are disproportionately impacted by burdens of the transportation system but do not receive an equal share of the benefits.”

And here are Upstream’s six key principles of transportation health equity:

Upstream is one of several local groups sponsoring a transportation equity event in Portland on April 6th. Who Gets Access? Transportation Equity from the National to the Local is being hosted by Smart Growth America and will include speakers from PolicyLink, T4 America, the Multnomah County Health Department, and the Service Employees International Union.

For further reading, check out this recent blog post from Plurale Tantum, Biking Advocacy and Race: Where’s the Disconnect?.

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