PathPath
  • About Us
  • Contact Streetsblog SF
  • Our Funders
  • Comment Moderation Policy
  • Streetsblog San Francisco Editorial Independence Policy
  • Donor Transparency Policy
    Follow Us:
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
Streetsblog Logo
    • HOME
    • USA
    • NYC
    • MASS
    • LA
    • CHI
    • SF
    • CAL
    • STREETFILMS
    • DONATE
Streetsblog SF Logo
  • Pedestrian Safety
  • Bicycling
  • Muni
  • Parking
  • Peninsula
  • California
    Follow Us:
  • Facebook
  • Twitter

Tanya Snyder

Tanya became Streetsblog's Capitol Hill editor in September 2010 after covering Congress for Pacifica Radio’s Washington bureau and for public radio stations around the country. She lives car-free in a transit-oriented and bike-friendly neighborhood of Washington, DC.

Recent Posts

Will the Next Merit-Based Transpo Program Rock Harder Than TIGER?

By Tanya Snyder | Sep 20, 2010 | No Comments
Experts are still trying to make sense of President Obama’s $50 billion plan for infrastructure spending, announced on Labor Day and later characterized as an upfront investment on a larger, multi-year transportation bill. More than a hundred people gathered at the Brookings Institution last Thursday looking to learn more about where the administration and Congress […]

Street Safety Projects Threatened as States Give Transpo $ Back to Feds

By Tanya Snyder | Aug 18, 2010 | No Comments
It’s payback time again for state DOTs. The fine print on the jobs bill Congress just passed includes a $2.2 billion rescission from state transportation funding, and projects to make biking and walking safer are especially at risk of losing out. State DOTs have to return funding to the feds, and programs to improve biking […]

The Problems With Ports, or Why We Need a National Freight Act

By Tanya Snyder | Aug 6, 2010 | No Comments
Maybe you commute by train, or maybe you’ve switched from driving to biking. But your stuff is still traveling the country by diesel truck. Containers at the Port of Oakland. Photo: NOAA Nearly a quarter of transportation-related greenhouse gas emissions come from freight. The movement of goods from port of entry to a store near […]
      • About Us
      • Contact Streetsblog SF
      • Our Funders
      • Comment Moderation Policy
      • Streetsblog San Francisco Editorial Independence Policy
      • Donor Transparency Policy
        Follow Us:
      • Facebook
      • Twitter
      Streetsblog SF Logo