Transit Board Diversity and Pandemic Service Cuts in Vulnerable Communities

Author:

Voulgaris Carole Turley1ORCID,Ray Rosalie Singerman2ORCID,Fischer Lauren Ames3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Urban Planning and Design, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA

2. Department of Geography and Environmenal Studies, Texas State University, San Marcos, TX

3. Department of Public Administration, University of North Texas, Denton, TX

Abstract

Despite its primary role in shaping policy and service characteristics, board governance is an understudied topic in the field of urban transit. Existing research on board management and representative bureaucracy theory suggests that the race and gender diversity of boards has a significant impact on organizational activity but that these relationships are highly dependent on the cultural context and industry analyzed. In this paper, we evaluate how the diversity of transit boards (with respect to race, gender, and disability) in the U.S.A. correlates with service changes authorized by these boards during the COVID-19 pandemic. Utilizing a database on board governance and general transit feed specification data for 36 agencies, we find a positive relationship between the presence of women on transit boards and vertically equitable service cuts, defined as increasing or maintaining transit service in more vulnerable neighborhoods. Overall, transit agencies with more female board members had more equitable service cuts, on average, during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

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