Skip to main content

Colorado statewide transit integration plan gets rolling

Hoping to lay the groundwork for a future integrated system across the state, Colorado Department of Transportation (CDOT) officials launched its first comprehensive transit plan that will attempt to create a complete picture of existing local systems, future needs and gaps in service. With no funding available to create a complete statewide transit system, transportation leaders are instead working towards integration among the existing local and regional systems, possibly with a CDOT-managed connector ope
June 5, 2013 Read time: 2 mins
Hoping to lay the groundwork for a future integrated system across the state, 5701 Colorado Department of Transportation (CDOT) officials launched its first comprehensive transit plan that will attempt to create a complete picture of existing local systems, future needs and gaps in service.
 
With no funding available to create a complete statewide transit system, transportation leaders are instead working towards integration among the existing local and regional systems, possibly with a CDOT-managed connector operation that would provide links between them.

The transit plan, expected to take up to eighteen months to complete, is a first step, intended to be an inventory of existing transit options across the state and an analysis of what else riders need. It will also set out policies backing programs that make transit more available and attractive to travellers and more time-competitive with cars, according to a CDOT statement on the plan.

“It’s really working in each area of the state to look at what each of those systems’ needs are and how that integrates into a whole statewide picture,” CDOT project manager Tracey MacDonald said. “It’s a new endeavour.”

The plan is the second step in the creation of a transit and rail element of the State Transportation Plan. In March 2012, officials adopted a Freight and Passenger Rail Plan, which called for investment in a now-under way Advanced Guideway System feasibility study and, depending on the outcome of the study, a high-speed rail between Denver and Eagle County.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Report on the impact of recession on infrastructure funding worldwide
    May 10, 2012
    A new report examines how aggressive government belt-tightening and financial market deleveraging restrained worldwide infrastructure investments for 2012 and probably for the next five years. In the US, for instance, Infrastructure2012: Spotlight on Leadership, released by the Urban Land Institute (ULI) and Ernst & Young, says that constrained public budgets and a growing recognition at the local level of the importance of infrastructure, combined with lack of action at the federal level, are causing state
  • Trust AI – it knows more than we do
    January 14, 2020
    There’s no shortage of data – but making the most of it is the problem. Andrew Bunn examines how AI will be able to support and influence the development of advanced transportation strategies
  • Need for standardisation of toll classes
    March 2, 2012
    In a previous article Bob Lees of Idris Technology Ltd looked at the appropriateness of toll classes in relation to all-electronic toll fee collection. Here, he looks at how addressing classification standardisation could avoid downstream aggravation and cost
  • America fires V2V starting gun
    April 7, 2014
    Leo McCloskey, ITS America’s senior vice president for Technical Programs, talks to Jason Barnes about what the recent NHTSA ruling on light vehicle connectivity means for cooperative infrastructures in North America. In early February the US Department of Transportation’s (USDOT’s) National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) announced it had decided to start taking steps to enable Vehicle-to-Vehicle (V2V) communication technology for light vehicles. In so doing, the many safety-related applicati