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Also today: Where public transit is bouncing back, and US housing agency may be vulnerable to fraud after DOGE cuts.
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Rancho Cucamonga, a car-dependent suburb 40 miles east of Los Angeles, is positioning itself to become America’s first bullet train hub when Brightline West’s high-speed rail line opens in 2028. The private rail line will connect Southern California and Las Vegas, making Rancho Cucamonga the western terminus of the $12 billion project.

The city is planning a dense, walkable urban district around its upcoming rail station, transforming the sprawling commuter town into a transit-oriented destination for the millions of passengers expected to pass through annually, contributor Sarah Stodola reports. Success ultimately hinges on Brightline’s ability to meet its ambitious deadline and ridership projections. Today on CityLab: Next Stop: Rancho Cucamonga!

— Rthvika Suvarna

More on CityLab

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. 

US Housing Agency Vulnerable to Fraud After DOGE Cuts, Documents Warn
Departures of hundreds of lawyers put mortgage insurance claims, apartment building sales and other critical agency functions at risk, according to an internal memo.

Why Two Million Tourists Are Boarding Cruise Ships on a Texas Island
Galveston is the fastest growing cruise port in the country, but the flood of tourists are generating backlash.

What we’re reading

  • SpaceX’s town in Texas warns residents may lose property rights (Washington Post)

  • How your electric bill may be paying for big data centers’ energy use (Conversation)

  • Trump’s unprecedented immigration crackdown is leaving children terrified and ‘truly alone’ (Guardian)

  • ‘Carol,’ whose detention rattled her small Missouri town, is released (New York Times)

  • Hajj begins with world’s largest air conditioner, surveillance drones, and a ban on children (Time)


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