Also today: US renters face storm of rising cost, and states sound alarm over the billions in revenue they stand to lose under Trump. |
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After vandalism and theft effectively shut down Johannesburg’s passenger rail service during the Covid-19 pandemic, commuters say their daily trips have become more expensive and more dangerous. Most now rely on private mini-bus taxis, which are largely unregulated and characterized by cut-throat competition. Turf wars between rival taxi organizations have killed both drivers and passengers. The Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa has slowly been restoring services — and the city runs a limited bus network — but efforts remain inadequate for a city of 5 million people. The challenge partly stems from apartheid-era urban planning, which favored sprawl and scattered Black townships far from city centers, Zinhle Xaba reports. Today on CityLab: Commuters Are Caught in Johannesburg's Taxi Feuds as Transit Lags — Rthvika Suvarna Note: Yesterday’s edition of CityLab Daily misstated the price of Jeff Bezos’s wedding bash. That has been corrected in the web version. | |
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- Sold to the Trump family: one of the last undeveloped islands in the Mediterranean (Guardian)
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The MTV reality star in Trump’s cabinet who wants you to have more kids (New York Times) -
China’s electric-vehicle factories have become tourist hot spots (Wired) -
Elizabeth Street Garden to remain as Adams administration drops housing fight (Gothamist) -
The subway is not scary (How Things Work) | |
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