CityLab Daily
Also today: Local vote quashes odds for a Manhattan casino, and Texas’s oil boom spawns a toxic crisis.
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Dallas Area Rapid Transit (DART) is set to implement service cuts and fare increases beginning in January 2026, amid a longstanding clash with suburban cities who argue their contributions to the regional agency outweighs the service they receive. Several leaders are looking to reduce their funding share, even as DART warns that a smaller budget would hinder the system’s ability to operate effectively.

The tensions mirror broader financial and political pressures on US transit agencies, including Philadelphia’s SEPTA, San Francisco’s BART and the Chicago Transit Authority. The stakes are particularly high in the sprawling Dallas-Fort Worth metro area, one of the worst places to live in the country without a car, contributor Benton Graham reports. Today on CityLab: In Dallas, Transit Cuts Reflect Long-Simmering Suburban Tensions

— Arvelisse Bonilla Ramos

More on CityLab

Manhattan Casino Odds Fade After Caesars, Silverstein Rejected
Support for a Manhattan casino has lagged despite the potential for billions of dollars in revenue.

Where Public Transit Systems Are Bouncing Back Around the World
Across the US and Latin America, subways still see lower ridership and financial pain. But a data analysis shows that passenger counts are higher than ever in some Europe and Asia cities. 

Texas Oil Boom Spawns a Toxic Crisis of the Industry’s Own Making
Toxic wastewater is spreading across America’s biggest oil field.

What we’re reading

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  • Learning from Jersey City (Vital City)

  • Texas GOP may be banking on low Hispanic turnout in new map (Texas Tribune)

  • Tucked in a vineyard, a field of dreams where immigration fears fade away (New York Times)

  • The coming D.C. crime boomerang (Atlantic)

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