Skip to main content

$6bn LinkUS BRT funding on ballot in Ohio

Central Ohio Transit Authority wants to double portion it receives from local sales tax
By David Arminas June 11, 2024 Read time: 2 mins
A rendering of proposed bus and bicycle lanes at a Columbus intersection (image: LinkUS Columbus)

Residents in the central Ohio region of the US will be voting on funding for LinkUS, a planned major rapid bus transportation development.

LinkUS was announced in 2020 and aims to create up to five rapid transit high-capacity corridors to support the metropolitan population of Columbus, the capital of - and largest city in - Ohio.

The initiative is a collaboration between the Central Ohio Transit Authority (Cota), the city of Columbus and the Mid-Ohio Regional Planning Commission. City officials aim for projects similar to the city of Indianapolis's Red Line, a bus rapid transit (BRT) line.

Cota is not asking for an increase in the overall sales tax. It is requesting that it gets double its portion of the tax, rising from 0.5% to 1%. On a $100 purchase, that would mean an extra 50 cents in sales tax for Cota.

The chance to vote will be on ballots in the central Ohio region for the 5 November US general election. If approved by voters, the ballot measure would provide an estimated $6 billion in new revenue by 2050 to support LinkUS, the authority said.

According to the Greater Ohio Policy Center, an independent policy think tank based in the city of Columbus and focused on sustainable urban planning, the added 0.5% sales-tax increase would be dedicated to building out the BRT lines, where larger buses would have dedicated rights-of-way and passengers would board at stations. 

The existing 0.5% sales tax would continue to fund general Cota operations and the region's bus system. Cota already operates a modified and limited BRT system called the CMAX.

The $6 billion generated from the sales tax would aid Cota’s effort to raise matching federal money resulting from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law. 

The Columbus Dispatch newspaper reported that the 0.5% additional sales tax would help build more than 500 miles of sidewalks, bike paths and greenways as part of the LinkUS project. It would allow for new Cota on-demand vehicles for all of Franklin County - giving users a trip on smaller Cota vehicles anywhere in the county for $3, similar to Lyft and Uber services.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Fasten your seatbelts: it’s going to be a bumpy ride
    June 26, 2018
    A spat has broken out between two major US transportation organisations over how best to pay for road use: the ATA says tolls are ‘fake funding’ while IBTTA has scorned ‘scare tactics and falsehoods’… Much has been made of the state of US roads: everyone agrees that funding is needed – but who should pay? And how? Chris Spear, president and CEO of American Trucking Associationsm(ATA), believes finance is facing a cliff edge: the Highway Trust Fund (HTF), historically the primary source of federal revenue
  • £36bn from scrapped HS2 to be spent on 'transport projects' in England
    October 4, 2023
    Money from scaled-back high-speed rail project will be reallocated, insists Rishi Sunak
  • Fuel for Thought: The what, why and how of motoring taxation
    May 15, 2012
    The Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) has highlighted the dilemma facing many governments – motoring tax income set to fall even as traffic rises - in an analysis of the decline in the amount of revenue collect from fuel duty and VED (vehicle excise duty) in the UK. The collapse in income from motoring taxation will be caused by increasingly fuel efficient petrol and diesel cars, and the predicted large-scale take-up of electric vehicles.
  • Increased use of bio-fuels would enable Finland to achieve EU emissions goals
    June 16, 2014
    Finland’s technical research centre VTT and the Government Institute for Economic Research (VATT) have completed a study commissioned by the Ministry of Employment and the Economy and the Ministry of the Environment, assessing the impact of the EU's 2030 Climate and Energy Framework on Finland's energy system and national economy. The increased use of second-generation bio-fuels in road transport would provide Finland with the most cost-effective way of achieving the greenhouse gas emissions goals presente