Throughout the year, we cover thousands of news items, ranging from new bus orders and service launches to budget updates and technology deployments. But what resonates the most with our readers? Is it the launch of a bus rapid transit line? A groundbreaking of a multimodal facility? The award of federal funding to key infrastructure projects? The answer may surprise you.
Take a look at Mass Transit magazine’s wrapped, spotlighting what content our readers engaged with the most.
5. Leveraging private investment, alternative delivery methods to advance high-speed rail
Starting out the top five is a column that outlines strategies the industry can use to expand high-speed rail more efficiently. The column broke down numerous strategies, ranging from leveraging private investment and alternate delivery methods to optimizing procurement practices and implementing innovative technologies. The strategies were paired with real-world case studies featuring Brightline and Brightline West—the former already in operation and the latter completing preliminary engineering.
4. Suggested transportation fee helps fund Montreal’s Metro blue line extension
Not all our top stories focused on the U.S. This story shifts our attention to the Autorité régionale de transport métropolitain (ARTM) in Montreal, Quebec. The authority introduced a new transportation fee to help finance the construction costs of the extension of the Montreal metro's blue line. ARTM recommended the fee apply to large-scale real estate projects, specifically targeting the construction, reconstruction and expansion work related to a building’s change of use that’s within a one-kilometer (0.62-mile) radius of the future Blue Line extension stations.
3. BART advances Link 21 project
Another top story highlighted the progression of the Link 21 project, which is constructing a new transbay passenger train crossing between Oakland and San Francisco that aims to transform train travel options in the Northern California Megaregion. Over the summer, the Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART) Board of Directors voted to move the project forward as a standard-gauge rail project as opposed to BART’s unique broad-gauge tracks. The idea is to create a truly connected train network throughout the Bay Area by standardizing the infrastructure.
2. Keepings fares fair in New York City
Our second top story takes us to New York City, where the mayor and the department of social services began to transition the Fair Fares program to OMNY—the Metropolitan Transportation Authority’s contactless fare payment system. People enrolled in the Fair Fares program pay no more than $17 per week to ride the subway and eligible buses when they use their Fair Fare OMNY card.
1. Inside look at San Francisco’s The Portal
Finally, our most read story of the year took us deep into the cavernous space known as The Portal, a huge underground rail station that spans four blocks under San Francisco’s South of Market neighborhood. This inside look featured photos of construction progress to date, revealing how the project is inching closer to completion and transforming local and regional transit.
The Mass Transit mag editorial team wants to thank all our readers who engage with our content throughout the year—whether through the website, newsletters, magazines (print or digital) or social media. We look forward to another year of being your go-to, trusted source on the latest happenings in the North American public transit industry.
About the Author
Megan Perrero
Editor in Chief
Megan Perrero is a national award-winning B2B journalist and lover of all things transit. Currently, she is the Editor in Chief of Mass Transit magazine, where she develops and leads a multi-channel editorial strategy while reporting on the North American public transit industry.
Prior to her position with Mass Transit, Perrero was the senior communications and external relations specialist for the Shared-Use Mobility Center, where she was responsible for helping develop internal/external communications, plan the National Shared Mobility Summit and manage brand strategy and marketing campaigns.
Perrero serves as the board secretary for Latinos In Transit and is a member of the American Public Transportation Association Marketing and Communications Committee. She holds a bachelor’s degree in multimedia journalism with a concentration in magazine writing and a minor in public relations from Columbia College Chicago.

