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Good Roads Podcast

Good Roads Podcast

Written by: Thomas Barakat
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Good Roads publishes a quarterly magazine that looks at all things infrastructure and transportation that effects our municipal members across Ontario. In this podcast we will select a couple of interesting or pressing articles from the magazine and expand upon and discuss them.2026 Good Roads Podcast Political Science Politics & Government
Episodes
  • The Bulletin Breakdown | DIY Pothole Repairs, New E-Bike Rules & Road Expansion Costs
    Jun 1 2026

    This week’s episode explores three stories focused on maintenance, regulation, and the long-term cost of infrastructure decisions:

    🛠️ A Community Approach to Pothole Repairs

    A volunteer road maintenance program in Devon, England is attracting attention for its low-cost approach to fixing small infrastructure issues before they become major problems. Residents are trained and equipped to perform tasks like pothole patching, drainage clearing, and sign maintenance. Could a similar model help Ontario municipalities stretch limited maintenance budgets further?

    🚲 Ontario Prepares New E-Bike Rules

    The province is proposing a new classification system for e-bikes as municipalities face growing concerns around safety, enforcement, and battery fires. The changes could introduce new rules for heavier, faster e-bike models, including insurance and licensing requirements. As e-bike use continues to grow rapidly, municipalities are being pushed to adapt infrastructure and regulations at the same pace.

    🛣️ Repair Roads or Expand Them?

    A new U.S. report suggests governments often prioritize highway expansion over repairing existing infrastructure — even when the math says repair makes more financial sense. Researchers argue that widening roads creates long-term maintenance burdens without solving congestion, while deferred maintenance continues to pile up. The findings raise important questions about how infrastructure dollars should really be spent.

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    32 mins
  • The Bulletin Breakdown | Noise Cameras, Induced Demand & Ford’s Smart Car Patent
    May 25 2026

    This week’s episode explores three stories shaping the future of enforcement, transportation planning, and vehicle technology:

    🔊 The Rise of Noise Cameras

    As warmer weather returns, so do complaints about loud vehicles and street racing. Toronto is now exploring the possibility of automated noise enforcement using AI-powered camera technology capable of identifying excessively loud vehicles in traffic. The idea raises important questions about enforcement authority, municipal regulation, and how cities balance quality of life with emerging technology.

    🚧 What Engineering Textbooks Leave Out

    A new study argues that many transportation engineering textbooks still fail to properly explain induced demand — the well-established phenomenon where adding more lanes often creates more traffic. Researchers warn this educational gap may leave engineers entering the workforce with outdated assumptions about congestion management, even as transportation agencies increasingly focus on demand management and multimodal planning.

    🚘 Ford’s Cars Could Move Themselves Out of Danger

    Ford has filed a new patent for collision-avoidance technology that could allow parked vehicles to detect danger and move themselves out of harm’s way. The concept goes beyond traditional safety systems by using sensors and predictive analysis to respond proactively to threats nearby. While patents don’t always become products, the technology offers a glimpse into where connected and automated vehicles may be headed next.

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    30 mins
  • The Bulletin Breakdown | Canada Road Safety Week, Uber Congestion & Dangerous Car Ads
    May 19 2026

    This week’s episode explores three stories shaping driver behaviour, urban congestion, and road safety culture:

    🚓 Canada Road Safety Week Returns

    Police services across the country are increasing enforcement efforts as part of Canada Road Safety Week 2026. The campaign targets the “big four” dangerous driving behaviours: impaired driving, distracted driving, speeding, and seatbelt violations. Despite decades of awareness campaigns, unbelted occupants still account for a significant share of Ontario road fatalities, showing how persistent some road safety challenges remain.

    🚗 Rideshare Congestion Keeps Growing

    New data reveals that rideshare drivers in Toronto spend nearly half their time driving without passengers. At the same time, the number of rideshare vehicles on the road continues to surge, dramatically outnumbering taxis and contributing to congestion in the downtown core. The findings are reigniting debate over whether municipalities should cap rideshare vehicle numbers the same way taxi licenses have historically been regulated.

    📺 Are Car Commercials Encouraging Dangerous Driving?

    A new study from the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety suggests modern car advertisements increasingly emphasize speed, power, and aggressive driving while downplaying safety. Researchers argue these marketing trends may help normalize risky driving behaviour at a time when road fatalities remain stubbornly high. The contrast with countries like the UK and France — where stricter advertising rules exist — raises important questions about how driving culture is shaped.

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    32 mins
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