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Breaking: Last-Second Bill Would Increase Active Transportation Funding

This just in: Active transportation is finally getting some love in Sacramento. A bill was introduced today to double the funding available for projects and programs that encourage people to walk or ride bikes by making streets and paths safe and comfortable for them.
3:01 PM PDT on September 4, 2015

This just in: Active transportation is finally getting some love in Sacramento. A bill was introduced today to double the funding available for projects and programs that encourage people to walk or ride bikes by making streets and paths safe and comfortable for them.

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Assemblymembers Eduardo Garcia, (D-Coachella), Autumn Burke (D-Los Angeles), and David Chiu (D-San Francisco) introduced A.B. X1-23 this afternoon. The last-minute bill, part of the special session on transportation called by Governor Brown to discuss transportation funding in California, is the first one to directly address making streets and roads safe for people who don’t drive cars. It’s so new it’s not even up on the state’s legislative information website yet.

“We believe that, in the ongoing conversations about generating dollars for transportation, we cannot forget the nonmotorized portion of our stakeholders,” said Garcia. “As we discuss future funding for transportation, we want to make sure we recognize that nonmotorized transportation plays a key role. It’s important for climate change policy, it’s important for public health–including obesity–and it’s important for folks with disabilities.”

The bill would double the amount of money in the Highway Transportation Account that is allocated to the Active Transportation Program, which funds projects that encourage and promote walking and riding bikes. The bill also incorporates assurances that the funding would be available to disadvantaged communities.

“This bill has a direct correlation with other state policies,” said Garcia, including climate change policies to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and Caltrans goals to double the portion of trips made by bicycling and walking.

The bill seeks to do a number of things:

  • Increase funding available to the Active Transportation Program, which currently receives around $120 million per year. That’s roughly one percent of the total transportation budget, although bike and walk trips together account for nearly 19 percent of all trips made in the state.
  • Ensure local agencies can compete for the funds, giving priority to walkability and bike projects that contribute to better health and economic outcomes in all communities, but especially in disadvantaged ones.
  • Include planning and technical assistance as eligible uses for funding, especially for disadvantaged communities that have no means to create active transportation plans.
  • Prioritize connections and corridors where people want to travel, as well as areas that lack bike and pedestrian facilities altogether.
  • Create a pot of funding for improving safety for children walking and biking to school.
  • Prioritize projects that “recruit, hire, and train low-income, formerly incarcerated, and/or disconnected youth and adults, and other individuals with barriers to employment.”
  • Prioritize maintenance funds for active transportation projects, so they are not just built and then left to fall apart, particularly in disadvantaged communities.

“This is an area where we have underinvested in the past,” said Garcia, “and it’s time to change that.”

The bill, introduced today, may be considered in the special session as early as Tuesday. It joins a flurry of last-minute amendments and votes coming at the end of the California legislative session, which closes on Friday.

Photo of Melanie Curry
Streetsblog California editor Melanie Curry has been thinking about transportation, and how to improve conditions for bicyclists, since her early days commuting by bike to UCLA long ago. She was Managing Editor at the East Bay Express, and edited Access Magazine for the University of California Transportation Center. She also earned her Masters in City Planning from UC Berkeley.

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