Skip to main content

ARTBA: voters want transportation investment

The preliminary US election results showed that voters in 22 states approved ballot measures that will provide US$201 billion in funding extensions and new revenue for state and local transportation projects, according to the American Road & Transportation Builders Association’s Transportation (ARTBA).
November 11, 2016 Read time: 2 mins

The preliminary US election results showed that voters in 22 states approved ballot measures that will provide US$201 billion in funding extensions and new revenue for state and local transportation projects, according to the 5565 American Road & Transportation Builders Association’s Transportation (ARTBA).

Analysis by the ARTBA’s Transportation Investment Advocacy Center (ARTBA-TIAC) indicated that 69 per cent of the 280 transportation funding ballot measures up for vote across the nation were approved, with results still pending for seven local areas.

Voters in California approved 15 of 26 transportation ballot measures worth US$133 billion, including a one cent sales tax in Los Angeles that will provide US$120 billion over 40 years for local road, bridge and transit projects. California voters also rejected a state-wide measure that would have required any public infrastructure bond over US$2 billion to go on the ballot for voter approval.

Voters in Illinois and New Jersey passed transportation tax ‘lockbox’ measures to prohibit state lawmakers from diverting transportation user fee revenue to non-transportation uses. Maine approved a state-wide transportation bond issue for US$100 million and Rhode Island voters approved US$70 million in bonds for port investment.

In Washington state, voters approved a 25-year, US$54 billion revenue package that would support expanding Sound Transit light rail and bus routes. The package included a bond issue and adjustments in property, sales and motor vehicle taxes.

In Missouri, a state-wide initiative to increase the state’s cigarette tax to raise an estimated US$100 million annually for transportation investments failed. Voters in Georgia approved local sales tax increases that would raise nearly US$4 billion for road and transit projects in the metropolitan Atlanta area.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • US Cities push for smarter poles
    June 25, 2018
    US Cities The need to connect existing infrastructure has led various US transit authorities into imaginative alleyways: David Crawford examines some new roles for street furniture. US cities are vying with each other in developing schemes to create a new generation of connected places. Their strategies include taking advantage of their streetlight poles’ height and ubiquity to give them new roles in supporting intelligent nodes. They are now being equipped for collecting real-time data on key transport
  • Integrating ferry transport into smart ticketing
    March 1, 2013
    Transport authorities are increasingly looking to integrate ferry travel into the mix of public transport. David Crawford finds out more. The new A$370m (US$398m) Opal public transport smartcard system being installed by the Cubic Transportation Systems (CTS)-led Pearl consortium in Sydney is geographically the largest in the world to date. The consortium includes the Commonwealth Bank of Australia; Australian retail payment system provider ePay; Australian infrastructure engineering company Downer Group; a
  • How can US transportation be ‘re-envisioned’?
    October 17, 2019
    In her address to this year’s ITS America Annual Meeting, congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton, chair of the House Subcommittee on Highways and Transit, called for a ‘re-envisioning’ of transportation. Her speech is below – and ITS International asks a number of US experts what they would like to see ‘re-envisioned’…

    I would like to welcome  ITS America to the nation’s capital.

  • Carbon finance delivers critical support to mass transit schemes
    February 2, 2012
    David Crawford investigates carbon finance in transport. World Bank carbon finance grants are delivering critical support to major mass transit deployments in emerging and developing economies. Only recently operative in the transport sector, the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM, see panel) is designed to generate additional income streams and improve internal rates of return on projects funded from public- and private-sector sources.