Oregon Transportation Commission approves $62 million in improvements to public transportation

Sept. 19, 2019
The improvements will focus on increasing frequency, reducing fares for low-income riders and purchasing low- or no-emission buses.

The Oregon Transportation Commission approved the spending of $62 million on public transportation needs such as expanded hours of service, new low- or no-emission buses, new shelters and more routes.

This is the second round of applications for the new Oregon Statewide Transportation Improvement Fund (STIF) and it includes applications from 22 eligible transit providers.

The funds will help expand transit services in communities around the state to better serve all Oregonians. The emphasis is on increasing frequency, reducing fares for low-income communities, purchasing low- or no-emission buses in urban areas, improving connections between cities and more.

With today’s approval, the total estimated measurable project benefits and outcomes in service improvements or expansions for the entire 2019-2021 biennium are as follows:

· 37 million new transit trips;

· 215 million new miles of service by buses;

· 1.6 million low-income households will be within half a mile of a transit stop

·  89 new low- or no-emission buses;

·  497,000 new transit trips for high school students; and

·  2,097 units of equipment, such as security cameras, bus shelters and bus charging infrastructure.

The list of the 22 recipients and details of their approved plans are available on the STIF website. Keep Oregon Moving, the historic transportation funding package (HB 2017), established the STIF.