Transit projects on track
Voters in Utah and nation showing their approval
Of the 30 ballot initiatives, bond issues, referendums, tax increases or other transit-related questions posed to voters in the Nov. 2 election, 22 of them were approved.
The Center for Transportation Excellence reported those approvals are worth an estimated total of more than $40 billion.
The winning measures include a long-term plan for transit expansion in Denver that calls for new light-rail mass transit lines and a Bus Rapid Transit system; light rail construction and bus system improvements in Phoenix, worth $16 billion; and a tax increase to keep buses running at current operating levels in Spokane, Wash.
"This has been a record year for transit initiatives," Stephanie Vance, program manager for the Center for Transportation Excellence, said in a recent edition of Passenger Transport. "We've seen a significant jump in the number of transit initiatives on the ballot and in how many passed.
"Citizens across the country, regardless of party, strongly support transit investments and more transportation choices."
Another 21 transit initiatives were on ballots in August or other special-election dates during the year and 17 of those also were approved.
"From suburban to urban to rural communities, the success of these initiatives proves that people are willing to invest in quality transit services that will pay dividends for years to come," American Public Transportation Association president William Millar told Passenger Transport.
"Voters clearly said that they deserve a better quality of life that available public transportation brings namely, less congestion, cleaner air and access to jobs."
The same rhetoric is being bandied about here in Utah as transit supporters eye a possible ballot measure in 2006. The minimum they are likely to seek is an across-the-board equalization in the sales tax support the Utah Transit Authority currently receives.
Thanks to a successful ballot measure in 2000, UTA's sales tax revenue increased from a quarter of a cent in Salt Lake County to 7/16 of a cent. (A quarter of that quarter-cent increase in 2000 was reserved for road construction projects.)
But in Weber County, residents already contribute a full half-cent in sales tax revenue. And in the Utah County locales served by UTA, only a quarter cent of sales tax is dedicated for use by the agency.
The Wasatch Front Regional Council, the metropolitan planning organization for all the Wasatch Front counties except Utah County, recommended in October a number of tax and fee hikes to fund future transportation projects. Among them was a suggestion that UTA's sales tax share be increased to a uniform half cent throughout its service area.
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