What does Dorval Carter actually do?
AutumnChicagoCorruptionCrimeEconomicsEducationElection 2024LawRailroadsRestaurantsTransport policyTravelUrban planningWorld PoliticsOur lead story today concerns empty suit and Chicago Transit Authority president Dorval Carter, who just can't seem to bother himself with the actual CTA:
From the end of May 2023 to spring 2024, as CTA riders had to cope with frequent delays and filthy conditions, Carter spent nearly 100 days out of town at conferences, some overseas, his schedule shows.
Most of Carter’s trips between June 2023 and May 2024 were for events related to the American Public Transportation Association, a nonprofit advocacy group he chaired in 2022 and 2023. Carter spent a week in Pittsburgh and another in Orlando, six days in Puerto Rico and five days in Washington, D.C. He also took trips to Spain, New Zealand and Australia.
In total, Carter was out of town for 97 of the 345 days Block Club reviewed, according to his schedule. That means he spent 28 percent of that period outside of Chicago.
Block Club previously reported that Carter used his CTA-issued card for rides just 24 times between 2021 and 2022. CTA records show the number of times Carter swiped his work pass increased to 58 in 2023, according to a July op-ed piece in the Tribune.
Spain, I should note, has possibly the best train network in the world outside Japan, so maybe he learned something there? But as is typical with municipal barnacles, grifting along in high-profile city jobs, his office won't say.
In other news:
- The for-profit city of Próspera, Honduras, founded by crypto bros, has exhausted the patience of the Honduran government.
- Speaking of crypto bros, Julia Ioffe points to Pavel Durov, who doesn't look like the victim he claims to be.
- Could the kind of coalition that slowed dam construction in the 1980s stop excessive highway expansion in the 2020s?
- Foliage has already started to turn in parts of the Rockies and Adirondacks, and will peak in Chicago about six weeks from now.
- Crain's explains how Chicago-based fast-casual restaurant chain Roti wound up in Chapter 11.
- Why do undergraduate economics courses skip over the field of behavioral economics, other than because it upends many of their models about how people make decisions?
Finally, Pamela Paul imagines how the RFK Jr campaign looks from inside his head—specifically, to the worm encysted in his brain.
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David Harper
Apropos signs of autumn, I saw Orion over the trees to the east of my house around 05:00 this morning. That's the first time this summer, and a sure sign that autumn is coming. But not until 12:43 UTC on 22 September.
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