There's good news out of the Senate committee responsible for doling out transportation funds.
The Indianapolis Cultural Trail was funded in part with a TIGER grant. Photo: Walk Indianapolis
Last week, the Senate Appropriations Committee okayed a small increase in TIGER funding, according to Stephen Lee Davis at Transportation for America. TIGER is the program that allows local governments to compete directly for transportation funds, circumventing state DOTs, and helps get a lot of walking, biking, and transit projects off the ground. It must be renewed every year, so its prospects are always in doubt.
If approved by the full Senate and House, the committee's proposal would set TIGER funding at $525 million, a $25 million increase over the previous year's budget.
Elected officials and civic leaders across the U.S. campaigned for funding TIGER. A letter signed by 25 mayors -- including the mayors of Tallahassee, Kansas City, and Anchorage, Alaska -- urge lawmakers to continue the program [PDF], noting that applications for TIGER grants have typically exceeded available funds by a factor of 10.
T4A's Davis said the bill could be brought to a floor vote sometime this week. The same bill would also authorize $2.3 billion for New Starts, the grant program that funds major transit expansion projects, and $1.4 billion for passenger rail. Those funding levels are in line with what was laid out in the most recent federal transportation law.
Angie is a Cleveland-based writer with a background in planning and newspaper reporting. She has been writing about cities for Streetsblog for six years.
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