Skip to main content

ITSWC 2022: Chace urges ITS to find 'who's missing'

Call to action from ITS America CEO highlights importance of listening to new voices
By Adam Hill September 20, 2022 Read time: 2 mins
Laura Chace: 'Are we listening, are we making changes to how we implement?' (image: James Robbins)

The opening ceremony of ITS World Congress 2022 saw Laura Chace, president and CEO of ITS America, calling for a greater emphasis on including voices which are often not heard when it comes to planning ITS solutions.

Her plea was for the intelligent transportation community to think hard about how their products and services were used in the real world. The Congress theme of ‘Transformation by Transportation’ points to the idea that technology itself is not the focus.

“It’s about what these solutions can deliver for people,” she said. But in order to create greener, safer transportation services, there was a need to take account of all sorts of voices – not just those of the ITS sector.

“Are we listening, are we making changes to how we implement?” she asked. “Who is missing from this conversation? Who do we need to bring in to this work?”

Also at the opening ceremony, guest speaker Los Angeles mayor Eric Garcetti said the Congress' host city was seeking to ‘reimagine’ urban mobility. “We are trying to put the ‘human’ back into transportation,” he said. “Let’s make sure transportation isn’t just an idea, but something that implements a better world for all of us.”

Read ITS International's ongoing coverage of ITS World Congress 2022 in Los Angeles here

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Lack of communication jeopardises road weather information
    February 3, 2012
    A lack of communications means that the case for more widespread use of road weather information systems is still not happening, says Vaisala's Jon Tarleton. More effective exchanges up and down the political scale are needed, he adds
  • Report tries to digest 'elephant' of transport decarbonisation
    March 2, 2023
    Mott MacDonald, London Transport Museum and Thales GTS release new research
  • Complementing traditional ITS with new technologies
    April 11, 2013
    For a long time, the ITS industry agonised over how to make itself better known to the public. There were pragmatic reasons for this – greater awareness of what it is and does leads to greater lobbying power, an important consideration for a small industry pitched against the might of the road-building fraternity in the fight for budgets – but there was also an element, it must be said, of just wanting to be ‘loved’. But that desire runs up against several realities. The first is that even ‘experts’ strugg