Skip to content
Sponsored

A Bike-Ped State of the Union: 9.6% of Trips, 1.2% of Federal Funding

(editor's note - Local coverage tomorrow. - DN)
2:09 PM PST on January 28, 2010

(editor’s note – Local coverage tomorrow. – DN)

With the nation still digesting the State of the Union address, the
Alliance for Biking & Walking picked an auspicious day to release
their biennial Benchmarking report on America’s bike-ped behavior. The
group’s bottom-line conclusion: federal transportation funding
continues to disproportionately shortchange travelers powered by their
own two feet.

chrt.png(Chart: Alliance for Biking & Walking)

The
Alliance crunched numbers from all 50 states to determine how much of
their federal transportation dollars are spent on improving bike-ped
infrastructure, access, and safety.

Overall, the report
found that biking and walking account for 9.6 percent of all U.S. trips
(0.9 percent of that share from biking, 8.7 percent from walking) but
just 1.2 percent of federal transport spending.

That gap
was exacerbated in recent months by a cancellation of transportation
funding that occurred when Congress failed to pass a new six-year
federal bill in the fall. Many states trimmed disproportionately
from their Transportation Enhancements funds, which come from
Washington’s highway program and account for about half of federal
bike-ped spending.

But that doesn’t mean states are entirely
losing ground when it comes to bike-ped improvements. Since the
Alliance’s last report in 2007, the number of states setting goals to
boost walking and biking has risen by 44 percent — while the number of
states working on decreasing bike-ped fatalities has increased by 78
percent.

The Alliance also singled out states doing
particularly well — and poorly — at encouraging residents to walk and
bike. Some of the highest-achieving states may come as a surprise
(Alaska, home of the “bridge to nowhere,” is tops for walking to work).
Check out a few winners and losers after the jump, and download the
Alliance’s complete Benchmarking report right here.

Share of commuters who walk: Alaska at No.1, Alabama at No. 50

Share of commuters who bike: Oregon at No. 1, Alabama at No. 50

Bike-ped fatality rates: Vermont has the lowest, Florida the highest

Per-capita bike-ped funding: Virginia has the lowest, Alaska the highest

Streetsblog has migrated to a new comment system. New commenters can register directly in the comments section of any article. Returning commenters: your previous comments and display name have been preserved, but you'll need to reclaim your account by clicking "Forgot your password?" on the sign-in form, entering your email, and following the verification link to set a new password — this is required because passwords could not be carried over during the migration. For questions, contact tips@streetsblog.org.

More from Streetsblog Los Angeles

Friday’s Headlines

June 12, 2026

SGV Connect 148: World Cup, 6-7 Edition

June 12, 2026

Guest Editorial: Burbank Voters Approved Transit. Why Is City Hall Still Fighting It?

June 11, 2026

Thursday’s Headlines

June 11, 2026

2026 Primary Election Results Round-Up: Strong Voter Support for Most Livable Streets Candidates

June 10, 2026
See all posts