More than $233 million approved for public and active transportation projects

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Bike paths, transit shelters, new buses: just a few examples of OTC-approved projects

May 14, 2021

For more information, contact Marsha Hoskins, Public Transportation Policy and Implementation manager, 503-986-3266

SALEM – The Oregon Transportation Commission yesterday approved funding more than $233 million in projects from several different programs – all aimed at supporting multimodal transportation options across the state. All the programs are housed in ODOT’s Public Transportation Division, and Administrator Karyn Criswell praised the work of those involved in getting to this point.

“These awards represent a culmination of hundreds if not thousands of cumulative hours of effort on the part of staff, our advisory committees and local agency partners,” Criswell said. “The rigor and thoughtfulness that our team and our partners bring to identifying and prioritizing needs, formulating project selection criteria that advance our mobility, social equity, safety, climate and other goals, and carefully scoring and ranking applications is truly inspiring and frankly, just amazing! And you did it all during a pandemic, which added complexity to our processes.”

Here is the breakdown of programs and total amounts approved. Links provide more information about each program.

Multimodal projects like these are key contributors to all three of ODOT's Strategic Action Plan priorities: equity, a modern transportation system and sufficient and reliable funding. The Oregon Community Paths Program is a new program dedicated to help plan and build off-road walking and biking paths that connect communities and destinations. Statewide Transportation Improvement Fund programs help communities and regions offer options to driving a vehicle, reduce congestion, and lower greenhouse gas emissions from the transportation sector by improving public transportation, both within cities and between them.

Dedicated funding for the Oregon Community Paths Program is a result of HB 2592 (2019), which established the Multimodal Active Transportation Fund, comprised of Connect Oregon funds, a portion of the Vehicle Privilege Tax, and the Bicycle Excise tax. The statewide allocation of the Transportation Alternatives component of Federal Highway funds is also dedicated to the program. For the program’s first cycle, an additional $4 million in Oregon Transportation Operating Funds were added to help bring total funding to $15.1 million.

The Statewide Transportation Improvement Fund originated with Keep Oregon Moving (HB 2017), the Oregon legislature’s historic funding program, and it is funded in large part by a one-tenth of 1 percent payroll tax.

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