Tue., June 28
Youth Way on the MBTA

 

Recent Episodes

Supported by:

Thurs., 5/24/12
A Lot to Think About

Thurs., 5/24/12
A Lot to Think About

The Callie Crossley Show

Eran Ben-Joseph and Jason Schrieber join us.

Wed., 5/23/12
Aging Behind Bars

Wed., 5/23/12
Aging Behind Bars

The Callie Crossley Show

Kathleen Dennehy, Jamie Fellner and Beth Schwartzapfel join us.

Wed., 5/23/12
The Cost of Democracy

Wed., 5/23/12
The Cost of Democracy

The Callie Crossley Show

Lawrence Lessig joins us.

Tue., 5/22/12
Political Roundtable

Tue., 5/22/12
Political Roundtable

The Callie Crossley Show

Dorie Clark, Kevin Peterson and Marvin Venay join us.

Mon., 5/21/12
Coming Home

Mon., 5/21/12
Coming Home

The Callie Crossley Show

Coleman Nee and Paul Rieckhoff join us.

Mon., 5/21/12
Fahim Speaks

Mon., 5/21/12
Fahim Speaks

The Callie Crossley Show

Fahim Fazli and Michael Moffet join us.

Related Content

Comment on This Episode

Post a Comment

Youth Way on the MBTA

Thousands of youths in the Boston area use the MBTA every weekday to get to school and after-school extracurricular activities. For some, the cost of riding the T is a heavy burden- even preventing students from being able to attend school. Today, we meet two teens working on a youth campaign to get the MBTA to create an improved Youth Pass- one that would cost $10/month, be available to anyone aged 12 to 21, and have no time restrictions.

Youth Way on the MBTA leaders Amatullah Mervin, 18, and Davonte Jordan, 17, join us. They are  co-authors of the June 2011 Report: Opportuni(T): Youth Riders, the Affordability Crisis, and the Youth Pass Solution.

News updates from WGBH

See a sample »

   

2012 WGBH Auction
Explore! Members' Magazine iPad App