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🚙 Driving is up

Plus: 🍽 The most Boston food | Monday, September 23, 2024
 
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Axios Boston
By Steph Solis and Mike Deehan · Sep 23, 2024

It's Monday, and officially autumn.

  • Greetings from Minneapolis, where we're attending the Axios Local retreat.

Today's weather: Mostly cloudy and mid-60s.

🎂 Happy birthday to Axios Boston members Melissa Paquette and Kathleen Barton!

Today's newsletter is 845 words — a 3.2-minute read.

 
 
1 big thing: We're driving more than before COVID
By and
 
A grouped bar chart showing the change in average daily vehicle miles traveled from spring 2019 to spring 2024 by metro area. The greatest increase was seen in McAllen, Texas (+67%). The greatest decrease was seen in Los Angeles (-16.6%). Boston saw a change of 1.6%.
Data: StreetLight; Chart: Axios Visuals

Driving rates are above pre-pandemic levels in almost every major U.S. metro, including Boston, a new analysis finds.

  • However, some of Massachusetts' other metros are bucking the trend.

Why it matters: The COVID-19 pandemic, when driving plummeted as people sought to "stop the spread," was a unique chance for cities to get a lasting handle on transportation-related emissions.

Driving the news: Average daily vehicle miles traveled (VMT) per capita increased 12.3% across the 100 biggest U.S. metro areas this past spring compared to the same period in 2019.

  • That's according to a new report from StreetLight Data, a transportation analytics firm.
  • VMT fell in just 12 of the metros.

Zoom in: The average increased by about 1.6% in Boston's metro area — an uptick dwarfed by some other areas of the country.

  • VMT per capita has increased the most in McAllen, Texas (67.6%); Boise City, Idaho (57.8%) and El Paso, Texas (42%).

The other side: Other parts of Massachusetts are still driving less than pre-pandemic, including Springfield, which is down about 6%, and Worcester, which has seen about a 2.5% dip.

  • The metros with the biggest reductions in VMT per capita are concentrated in California, like Los Angeles (-16.6%), San Francisco (-13.2%) and San Jose (-12.3%).

The intrigue: VMT is up 14% in the New York metro area, where a first-in-the-nation "congestion pricing" plan meant in part to reduce driving and gin up funds for public transit was shelved indefinitely at the eleventh hour.

Between the lines: While higher VMT tends to mean more vehicle-related emissions, it can also be a sign of changes generally perceived as positive, like more economic activity.

  • Lower VMT can be a sign of successful public transit or cycling projects — or an indication that lots of people are still working hybrid or remotely.

Yes, but: "GDP now stands above 2019 levels even in the metros where VMT is still down," per StreetLight's report.

  • "This is a signal that GDP growth can be decoupled from VMT growth."

The bottom line: "It's not just that [VMT] is back up, but we're actually seeing a bit of an acceleration compared to the previous couple of years," Emily Adler, director of content at StreetLight, tells Axios.

  • "So that suggests that we're not peaking, that whatever efforts we've strived for to keep VMT down, they're not quite working — or they're not working yet."

Tell your friends who drive into Boston

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2. 🔙 Back That Mass Up: Running of the bulls
 
Illustration of a seagull with its head in a coffee cup.

Illustration: Allie Carl/Axios

 

🐂 Eight bulls escaped from a rodeo in North Attleboro. Seven have been captured since. (Sun Chronicle)

🛩️ Delta announced new flights from Boston to Milan, Barcelona and Bozeman, Montana. (BBJ)

Methuen Mayor Neil Perry died on Saturday at age 65. (Globe)

  • Officials haven't released the cause of death, but he was battling kidney disease, per the Eagle Tribune.

A man who spit on the sidewalk outside his home in Dorchester now faces murder charges in a 1988 case. (CBS Boston)

  • Authorities say the DNA in Holloman's spit match the DNA found at the time of 25-year-old Karen Taylor's murder.
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Empower our Community
 
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Illustration: Andrew Caress/Axios

 

Become an Axios Boston member and fuel our mission to make readers smarter and faster on the news unfolding here.

Why it's important: The generosity of our members supports our newsroom as we work on the daily newsletter.

What's in it for you: Insider notes from the local reporters and other perks.

Thank you for trusting us.

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A message from hear.com

Own every conversation in 2024
 
 

Experts say the new IX hearing aids are the ultimate conversation starter because they're designed with clarity in conversation in mind, offering:

  • State-of-the-art noise suppression.
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Test drive Horizon IX today.

 
 
3. 📆 Social calendar
 
Illustration of a standing desk calendar with a blue pin, a red pin, a yellow pin, and a green pin.

Illustration: Gabriella Turrisi/Axios

 

Monday, 9/23

🪐 The Cambridge Science Festival kicks off with a self-guided tour of our solar system, thanks to MIT, 8am-8pm.

  • Other Monday sessions include an exhibit on humanoid robots by the MIT Museum at 3:30pm and an Aeronaut Brewery tour at 5:30pm.

Tuesday, 9/24

📖 The Boston Public Library's Parker Hill branch observes Banned Books Week with a discussion about books that changed the world, 4:30-5:30pm.

🍸 Long Live Roxbury hosts a sip & sculpt class, where you can take home two pieces of pottery, 6:30-8:30pm.

  • Price: $75-$105. Includes a beginner pottery kit.

Wednesday, 9/25

📖 Poet and translator Danielle Legros Georges joins scholar Marjorie Salvodon to discuss the release of "Blue Fare: Three Contemporary Haitian Poets: Évelyne Trouillot, Marie-Celie Agnant, Maggy de Coster," 7-8pm.

🎶 Conan Gray, a YouTuber turned recording artist, takes the stage at MGM Music Hall for two nights.

Thursday, 9/26

📖 Author M.L. Rio discusses her first novella, "Graveyard Shift," at the Harvard Book Store, 7pm.

Friday, 9/27

🎸 Preppy rock band Vampire Weekend brings its "Only God Was Above Us" tour to TD Garden.

Saturday, 9/28

🐶 Bring your dog and your stein to Barktoberfest at Park-9 Dog Park in Everett, 11am.

  • Park-9 will hold several competitions, including a stein holding contest for humans and a treat holding contest for pups.

🎶 Brat summer's not over yet. Charlie XCX plays at TD Garden with Australian singer Troye Sivan as the opener.

Sunday, 9/29

Nibble Kitchen's Back to School Cooking Class Series teaches you how to make tasty snacks with Desi Yums, 5-7:30pm.

  • Price: $60+.

Spread the word

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4. Vote for the most Boston food
 
Boston
Bracket: Axios Visuals

Most of us have had our share of lobster rolls, clam chowder, Boston Cream Pie and Dunkin's formerly namesake doughnuts.

So we're asking you what the most quintessential Boston food is.

  • What do you tell visitors to get? What hometown favorite do you crave when you're away?
  • More importantly, what's so unique to eastern Mass. that nowhere else in the world can do it right?

Vote here

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A message from hear.com

Never say, "What?" with this hearing aid
 
 

The new Horizon IX hearing aids were designed with conversation in mind. Enjoy crystal-clear speech understanding, cutting-edge German engineering, smartphone connectivity, and a sleek, discreet design.

Does it sound like IX hearing aids have it all? Try a 45-day no-risk trial.

 

Deehan wants to see more traffic enforcement like this, please.

Steph is excited to explore Minneapolis during our work retreat.

This newsletter was edited by Jeff Weiner.

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