accessibility tools
Post Type

NPR News Now: USDOT Not Enforcing A Key Civil Rights Law After A Rule change

June 12, 2026—NPR covered the U.S. DOT’s rescission of Title VI disparate impact protections—the same rollback Public Advocates Senior Policy Advocate Laurel for Transportation Equity, Laurel Paget-Seekins, called “a major rollback of civil rights protections” in earlier coverage by KQED. USDOT oversees federal funding for transit, highways, airports, and ports nationwide—meaning this rule change affects how communities are considered (or not) across every mode of transportation infrastructure in the country. Laurel told NPR that losing this tool is “devastating,” given the long history of inequity embedded in U.S. transportation infrastructure.

Listen to the full story

Related Posts

KQED: Trump Transit Secretary Rescinds Key Civil Rights Law Once Used on BART

The Trump administration just gutted a bedrock civil rights protection for transit riders. Our Laurel Paget-Seekins broke it down for KQED—and explained why the fight is far from over in California.

Read more

KPFA Upfront: New Change from CARB Cutting Transit Funding

A new CARB rule is cutting funding for transit and affordable housing — here's what that means. Public Advocates' Laurel Paget-Seekins joined KPFA's UpFront to explain the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund, the Manufacturing Decarbonization Incentive, and what's really at stake when California breaks the promise Cap-and-Invest made to low-income communities.

Read more

AP News: California air regulators update a key climate program, sparking pushback from environmentalists

"These are investments that determine whether a student can afford to take transit to school, whether a senior can get to a doctor's appointment, whether a family can live near reliable transportation instead of enduring long commutes and higher costs."—Public Advocates' Michelle Pariset told the AP exactly what's on the line as California guts its climate fund.

Read more