Opinion / Nic Monisse
Making tracks
One might think that pro-transit candidates losing regional election races across the US this November would signal waning support for improvements to bus and rail infrastructure in the country. Not so. Though they might not have backed candidates, US voters approved all 11 of the mass transit projects that appeared on their ballots over the course of 2021. It makes this year the first in which every transit funding act that went before a US electorate was supported.
In November alone, voters endorsed some $100m (€88m) in new infrastructure, including an extension of the bus network in Toledo, Ohio, and multimodal improvements in Gilbert, Arizona. It’s an outcome not lost on American Public Transportation Association president Paul Skoutelas. “Even as times and circumstances change, what remains consistent is the voting public’s understanding that public transportation is critical to the future of their communities and part of a forward-looking vision,” says Skoutelas.
The backing is all the more significant in a country where, with a few notable urban exceptions, the car is king: some 82 per cent of people commute by car in the US. That reality should spur confidence in transit advocates across the globe. If automobile-obsessed American electorates can understand that investing in transit is a good thing – reducing traffic congestion, commuting costs and air pollution, while supporting a strong economy – then surely other communities can be convinced too. So whether you personally hail a bus or train to work, let’s mark this year as a success for riders of all modes of transit.