Publication Detail
Brief: Universal Basic Mobility Pilot Programs in Oakland and Bakersfield Are Combatting Transportation Poverty
UCD-ITS-RR-24-83 Brief UC ITS Research Reports
Available online at
https://doi.org/10.7922/G2BC3WX6
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Suggested Citation:
Sanguinetti, Angela (2024)
Brief: Universal Basic Mobility Pilot Programs in Oakland and Bakersfield Are Combatting Transportation Poverty
. Institute of Transportation Studies, University of California, Davis, Brief UCD-ITS-RR-24-83The concept of Universal Basic Mobility (UBM) calls upon policymakers to ensure all people have access to transportation services for basic needs like work, food, and healthcare. Pilot programs in California and beyond are testing UBM as a means to address the problem of transport poverty, often defined as a household spending more than 10% of their income on transportation (the average American household spends 16%). Transport poverty also encompasses issues of mobility access (e.g., how far a person can travel and what types of destinations they can reach in a defined amount of time) and transportation experience (e.g., safety). Those particularly vulnerable to transport poverty include low-income households, communities of color, undocumented immigrants, persons with disabilities, and youth who are neither working nor in school.
This policy brief is drawn from the report “ Evaluating Universal Basic Mobility Pilot Programs in Oakland and Bakersfield, California” available at https://www.ucits.org/research-project/2022-20.