TransForm’s latest research, Ride Fearlessly: A Framework for Reimagining Transit Safety, centers inclusive safety programs that move beyond policing. At the end of October, we gathered a dynamic panel of advocates to discuss innovative and inclusive programs happening across the Bay Area and beyond. TransForm Transportation Policy and Programs Manager Amy Thomson moderated. The panelists were:
- Haleema Bharoocha, former advocacy director at the Alliance for Girls and the report’s primary author
- Annie Lee, managing director of policy at Stop AAPI Hate
- Asiyahola Sankara, Equal Justice Works fellow
- Chris Van Eyken, director, research & policy at TransitCenter
- Rebecca Saltzman, BART board member
- Reimagine Safety Approaches: Seek out community-based approaches, leveraging innovation and imagination, intentional data analysis, and meaningful community partnerships. Use pilot programs to test new ideas and allow time to get feedback from riders and staff before making permanent changes.
- Redesign Systems, Culture, and Spaces: Create reliable and frequent service that meets changing rider needs. Use environmental design strategies such as bright lighting and accessible operator call boxes to mitigate everyday acts of harassment and harm. Cultivate inclusive and communal spaces and confront harmful behavior via strategies like bystander intervention training.
- Reduce Harm: Prevent negative interactions between riders and law enforcement by decriminalizing fare enforcement, deploying transit ambassadors, and limiting police use of force. Critically, agencies must review code of conduct enforcement policies, which can lead to harmful interactions with law enforcement that don’t enhance rider safety.
Lee spoke about recent legislation, such as SB 434, which will lift up voices that include people who have harmful interactions with police. She noted that Stop AAPI Hate has documented many incidents of verbal harassment that don’t rise to the levels of hate crimes. She hopes transit systems will provide solutions based on those lived experiences rather than crime reports.
Van Eyken spoke about the need for transit agencies to be more transparent about safety goals and provide the community with the information it needs to help reimagine public safety. He noted that most people don’t board transit to commit crimes, so police should be limited to violent incidents or workplace safety support. Assaults on transit workers have risen, and that needs to be addressed so they can work without fear, but the response should be targeted.
Sankara recalled seeing other young Black men assaulted and humiliated by police when he was a student and asked the group to consider the social costs of policing, including depression and anxiety, not just in people involved in traumatic encounters but in their families and witnesses. He called out racism and implicit bias as measurable threats to public health that transit agencies must consider when developing safety programs.
You can make a difference by sharing the Ride Fearlessly report, asking your local transit agency to adopt the report’s recommendations, or hosting TransForm to provide a briefing for any organizations you are a part of that are interested in taking action.
Watch the webinar: