Each year, CoMotion LA brings together leaders shaping the future of transportation—from startups and technologists to mayors and planners. The conversations this year made one thing clear: the next wave of mobility innovation isn’t just about new vehicles or apps. It’s about building the digital foundations that allow cities and private operators to work together seamlessly, safely, and at scale.
From autonomous vehicles to shared micromobility to curbside management, the systems that move people and goods are becoming increasingly interconnected—and increasingly digital. Yet, most cities are still working with analog tools and fragmented data. To create truly smart, efficient, and equitable transportation systems, we need to bridge that gap.
1. Global Events as Catalysts for Change
Several city leaders at CoMotion LA highlighted how major events—the 2026 World Cup and the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics—are serving as powerful deadlines to accelerate innovation. These events create a once-in-a-generation opportunity to rethink how transportation systems are managed, measured, and optimized.
Preparing for the surge in travel demand means more than just adding buses or lanes. It requires better coordination between modes, smarter use of curb space, and more real-time data-sharing between public and private actors. If cities can’t digitally track how people and goods move during major events, they’ll struggle to manage congestion, emissions, and access in ways that meet public expectations.
In many ways, these global events are forcing cities to do what they’ve long needed to do: invest in digital infrastructure with the same urgency as physical infrastructure.
2. The Case for Common Data Standards
Throughout the conference, a recurring theme was the importance of data standards. Whether the topic was shared scooters, delivery vehicles, or autonomous fleets, the message was consistent—cities can’t effectively manage what they can’t measure.
Today, every mode and operator tends to collect and share data in its own way. That fragmentation slows collaboration and prevents cities from managing mobility systems holistically. The good news is that open standards are evolving fast. Common frameworks like the Mobility Data Specification (MDS) and Curb Data Specification (CDS) are helping cities speak the same digital language as private operators.
Standardization isn’t just a technical detail—it’s the foundation for scaling innovation. When data is consistent, anonymized, and interoperable, cities can improve safety, integrate more mobility operators, and make policies more adaptive. For the private sector, it reduces friction, lowers compliance costs, and creates a fairer competitive playing field.
The future of urban mobility depends not just on new modes, but on our ability to connect them and integrate them into the fabric of our existing transportation infrastructure.
3. A New Era of City Innovation
One of the most encouraging takeaways from CoMotion LA was the growing confidence of cities as innovation leaders. The old narrative of “government versus startups” has given way to one of partnership and co-creation. Cities now are well-versed in influencing data standards and leveraging new digital tools to move at the speed of innovation.
We’re seeing city transportation departments adopt more agile approaches — piloting new delivery services, testing shared mobility management frameworks, and permitting new autonomous vehicle deployments. These local innovations are not just policy experiments; they’re blueprints for how the public sector can lead in the digital era.
Still, the challenge remains: innovation is often fragmented across jurisdictions. A patchwork of regulations and technical standards makes it hard for operators to scale efficiently. By investing in shared data standards and common frameworks for digital governance, cities can lower the barriers to innovation while still protecting the public interest.
4. The Road Ahead
The conversations in Los Angeles underscored that the future of mobility won’t be defined by a single technology or company—it will be shaped by how well we connect the ecosystem. Cities that build digital infrastructure today will be better prepared for tomorrow’s challenges, whether it’s managing autonomous vehicles, curb access, or dynamic pricing.
As global events approach, and as new technologies rapidly move from pilot to mainstream, the cities that thrive will be those that treat data as a public asset and collaboration as a competitive advantage.
Digital mobility isn’t just a technology story—it’s a new model for public–private coordination. Cities that invest in shared data frameworks and transparent processes will be able to manage transportation systems that are more responsive, efficient, and easier to scale.



