Rodrick Holmes Transit Equity Day Remarks
EDITOR’S NOTE: Rodrick Holmes spoke at Transit Equity Day on February 7, 2026. I asked him to hand-hold the microphone and he departed from his speech. These are his unedited prepared remarks.
Good morning, and thank you all for being here.
Before I talk about transit equity, I want to tell you about a young man.
He is working full time. He is going to school. He is trying to be a present father. He is doing that math a lot of people know well how to stretch time, money, and energy just a little bit further than seems possible.
He is running on coffee, deadlines, and optimism. He is late more often than he wants to be, early only by accident, and convinced that if he can just keep moving, everything will eventually work itself out.
He is not thinking about transportation policy. He is not thinking about funding formulas or equity frameworks. He is thinking about making it to work on time. Making it to class. Making it home before bedtime.
He is just trying to keep moving.
And here is the part that took him years to understand the reason he could keep moving day after day was because transit was there. Reliable. Affordable. Unremarkable in the best possible way.
That young man was me.
I was a young father trying to balance responsibility and ambition, doing what so many people do working to build something better while holding on to the people who mattered most. I did not have the luxury of stopping. And it was not until many years later that I realized public transit had quietly played a huge role in my story.
That is why Transit Equity Day matters to me.
Transit Equity Day is about more than buses, routes, or fares. It is about access. It is about dignity. And it is about whether people can reliably get to work, school, healthcare, and home without having to choose between transportation and the other necessities of life.
This day is intentionally observed on the birthday of Rosa Parks, not just to remember a historic moment, but to recognize an enduring truth: mobility is power.
When people can move freely and affordably, opportunity expands. When they cannot, inequities widen quickly and quietly.
Public transit is often invisible when it works well. No one throws a parade for a bus that arrives on time. But when transit fails, the consequences are immediate. Missed shifts. Missed medical appointments. Lost wages. Increased stress and isolation.
For many riders, transit is not a convenience. It is the difference between stability and crisis.
That is what we mean when we talk about transit equity.
Transit equity means that safe, reliable, and affordable transportation is not a privilege, but a public good. It means systems designed around how people actually live and work, not how we wish they did. It means understanding that transportation costs are often the second largest household expense after housing and that every dollar saved on mobility matters.
Here in Memphis, public transit makes real things possible every single day. It connects people to jobs across the city. It supports students, seniors, people with disabilities, and families without consistent access to a car. It fuels our workforce and strengthens our local economy.
When transit works, people show up. To work. To school. To care for my family. To participate in their community.
That brings me to where we are today as a system.
Over the past several months, our focus has been on stabilization, reliability, and trust.
Operationally, we are seeing real, measurable improvements. Fleet availability has increased, meaning more buses are available each morning to meet daily service demands. Maintenance performance has improved significantly, with strong gains in miles between service events, one of the clearest indicators of reliability and safety.
Those improvements are not accidental. They are the result of disciplined maintenance schedules, reopened parts and service pipelines, and clearer accountability across operations. They reflect a system doing the fundamentals better, day after day.
We are also making progress on staffing, training, and internal coordination. Reliability is not just about equipment. It is about people, processes, and consistency. When those elements align, service improves.
Affordability remains central to the equity conversation. Free fares have reduced immediate financial barriers for riders and increased ridership. While free fares alone are not a permanent solution, they tell us something important: when cost barriers are lowered, people use transit more. Access matters.
At the same time, we are strengthening financial controls and internal oversight to ensure resources are used responsibly and transparently. Equity and accountability are not competing values. They depend on each other. A system that is equitable must also be sustainable.
I want to be clear that this progress does not mean the work is finished.
Transit systems are complex. They reflect decades of decisions, investments, and disinvestment. Rebuilding reliability and trust takes time, consistency, and honest communication.
But direction matters. And today, the direction is forward.
Transit Equity Day is both a reminder and a commitment. A reminder that transportation has always been tied to civil rights, economic opportunity, and public health. And a commitment that the work of improving access, reliability, and fairness must continue deliberately and responsibly.
For me, this work is personal. I think about that younger version of myself, the young father just trying to keep moving. I think about how many people today are in that same place, juggling responsibility and hope, relying on a system that has to work.
Transit did not just help me get from point A to point B. It helped make possibility real at a time when stopping was not an option.
That is why transit equity matters. Not in theory. In practice. In people's lives.
Thank you for being here, for caring about this work, and for being part of the ongoing effort to ensure public transportation in Memphis is reliable, accessible, and worthy of the people who depend on it.
Thank you.
Rodrick Holmes



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