PathPath
  • Bicycling
  • Walking
  • Transit
  • Car Culture
  • Micromobility
  • Mobility Justice
  • COVID-19
    Follow Us:
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
Streetsblog Logo
    • HOME
    • USA
    • NYC
    • MASS
    • LA
    • CHI
    • SF
    • CAL
    • STREETFILMS
    • DONATE
Streetsblog USA Logo
  • Bicycling
  • Walking
  • Transit
  • Car Culture
  • Micromobility
  • Mobility Justice
  • COVID-19
    Follow Us:
  • Facebook
  • Twitter

Anne Lutz Fernandez

Anne Lutz Fernandez is a former corporate executive with experience in management and marketing of consumer brands such as Weight Watchers frozen foods and Bufferin pain relievers. She also spent a decade as an investment banker in New York and London where her work included marketing the firm's services to multinational corporations and advising clients on strategic mergers and acquisitions. She left her position as Director at Credit Suisse to become a writer and teacher. She currently teaches English and lives in Connecticut with her husband, who is also a teacher. She co-authored her first book, Carjacked: The Culture of the Automobile and its Effect on our Lives, with her sister, anthropologist Catherine Lutz.

Recent Posts

Magic Cars and Silver Bullets: Will the Self-Driving Car Save the World?

By Anne Lutz Fernandez | Jun 5, 2013 | 113 Comments
Back in the day, we beheld the future, and in it, we were zipping about in electric cars. Yes, on that day way back in the aughts, we beheld a future in which a passel of problems were about to become passé: crippling gas prices, entanglements with oil-rich frenemies, dirty air, and climate-changing emissions would […]

Multi-Modal Summer Reading

By Anne Lutz Fernandez | Aug 10, 2012 | 8 Comments
Summer gives permission to set aside serious reading for the refreshment of fluffier stuff. This year, though, several meaningful books on transportation are out that you might want to tuck into your beach bag. Each is that rare thing: a should-read that’s also a want-to-read. Straphanger: Saving Our Cities and Ourselves from the Automobile by […]

High Anxiety: Good Parents and Bad Parents on the Road

By Anne Lutz Fernandez | Jun 26, 2012 | 12 Comments
America’s roads have suddenly become dangerous places for America’s children. At least, that’s what’s suggested by a flurry of viral stories involving kids and cars. In May, an inebriated Florida couple made news when they took their granddaughter for a joy ride, pulling her behind their SUV in a toy car. Then came the story […]

The Auto Industry Wants Your Thanks

By Anne Lutz Fernandez | Apr 23, 2012 | 11 Comments
Feeling warmer and fuzzier about the auto industry bailout? With the help of the Obama reelection campaign, the industry is convincing more Americans that the $80 billion they forked over to save it were dollars well spent. In the latest Pew poll, the public responded more positively toward the bailout than ever before, with 56 […]

Nothing to Fear But Drivers’ Lack of Fear

By Anne Lutz Fernandez | Feb 17, 2012 | 13 Comments
Recently, I shared with a car enthusiast friend that I would never enjoy driving as much as he did, in part because cars scared me a little. I had experienced crashes and lost loved ones to them, I explained, which had a lasting effect. This struck him as both silly (who’s afraid of cars?) and […]

Pitchfork-Wielding Consumers Hold Auto Industry Hostage!

By Anne Lutz Fernandez | Jan 18, 2012 | 21 Comments
It’s sad, really. Tremendous gains in vehicle fuel efficiency have been squandered, MIT’s Christopher Knittel demonstrates in a study published in the American Economic Review. Knittel’s analysis quantifies how, while automakers have applied meaningful fuel economy innovations over the past several decades, these have produced only modest gains in miles per gallon, because at the […]

Getting Young People Back Into Cars Is Auto Industry Job #1

By Anne Lutz Fernandez | Nov 28, 2011 | 18 Comments
While the choked parking lots at many suburban high schools might mislead you, young people today are less interested in driving and owning cars than their counterparts in previous generations. This is happy news for environmentalists and complete streets advocates, who see fewer vehicles on the road as key to a healthier, wealthier society. For […]

Time to See Older Drivers Through Dry Eyes

By Anne Lutz Fernandez | Oct 24, 2011 | 29 Comments
“Have you cried at your desk at work yet today? Would you like to?” Time Magazine recently asked, inviting its readers to indulge in emotion on behalf of an Iowa couple whose story went viral last week. Gordon and Norma Yeager died as the result of a car crash, the same way about 630 Americans […]

Do We Treat Our Cars Better Than We Treat Ourselves?

By Anne Lutz Fernandez | Sep 30, 2011 | 12 Comments
Running Saturday morning errands, you may have found yourself in traffic, only to realize you’re stuck behind a line of vehicles inching into a car wash. Each month, nearly half of all American car owners head into one of the nation’s estimated 100,000 car washes to bathe their vehicles in some loving suds. “Then there […]

A Back-to-School Syllabus for Complete Streets Advocates

By Anne Lutz Fernandez | Aug 31, 2011 | 8 Comments
While Hollywood’s screenwriters, FX wizards, and product placers have contributed mightily to the idea of the automobile as the vehicle of freedom, joy, and rebellion, our literary lions have often taken a more gimlet-eyed view of car culture. Now, as summer ends, high school and college students across the country will put the car chases […]

After Years of Resistance, Auto Industry Agrees to New Mileage Standards

By Anne Lutz Fernandez and Catherine Lutz | Aug 2, 2011 | 2 Comments
As though to prove compromise isn’t as stiff a corpse as it appears, the Obama administration announced on Friday that it had reached a key agreement with an industry proficient at stonewalling government regulation: the automakers. The deal, which meaningfully raises fuel economy standards, was something of a welcome surprise, with the industry putting aside […]

The Once and Future Auto Bailouts

By Anne Lutz Fernandez and Catherine Lutz | Jul 6, 2011 | 4 Comments
You’d think the Obama campaign had confused Michigan and Ohio with Iowa and New Hampshire. As his 2012 Republican challengers flooded early primary states last month, the President instead headed to where he could stand beside beaming auto executives and watch proud workers toiling on once-idle assembly lines. The Obama administration and the industry have […]
Load more stories
      • About Us
      • Contact Us
      • Staff & Board
      • Our Funders
      • Contribute to Streetsblog USA
        Follow Us:
      • Facebook
      • Twitter
      Streetsblog USA Logo