Agencies step up to improve transfers at more transit hubs

In August, transit agencies will take the next step to improve transfers for riders, adding four more transit hubs to the “big sync” initiative. Transfers will be improved at Daly City BART, Palo Alto Caltrain, Dublin/Pleasanton BART, and Concord BART, adding to the transfer improvements in January at El Cerrito del Norte and San Rafael Transit Center.

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Adina Levin
Budget agreement saves transit funding, secures $750M in new short-term funding

Today, Governor Newsom and the state legislature announced a budget agreement to save public transit – at least in the short-term. Public pressure from you, tens of thousands of Californians, and the Move California coalition with 120+ partner organizations, helped motivate the state legislature to reject Governor Newsom's initial budget proposal and then to get the Governor to sign the deal. This victory wouldn’t have been possible without the work you and everyone else put in.

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Adina Levin
Notes from Korea: “Strong Government” Essential to Transformational Change

The third blog post in a series of three—South Korea’s "strong government" is not merely about ambitious politicians making bold promises—it also involves a network of empowered national and regional agencies and research institutions working collectively to implement those visions. These institutions provide the mandate, capacity, and authority needed to carry out public goals, with clearly defined roles and responsibilities.

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Ian Griffiths
BayPass, shared parking support Kiku Crossing affordable housing in San Mateo

A tour of Kiku Crossing, an affordable housing community near downtown San Mateo, showed transportation demand management strategies including Clipper BayPass, shared parking, and secure, plentiful bike storage help residents living in the community; help the city bring affordable using a downtown parking lot; and help the developer complete the project with less costly car parking.

The learnings have value for transit agencies and stakeholders deciding whether San Mateo County (and Santa Clara County) should participate in a regional funding measure and how to fund “transit transformation” investments including fare integration.

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Adina Levin
Regional Measure Funding for Rider Experience Improvements

An important goal for the regional funding measure is to pay for the better agency coordination that leads to rider experience improvements, commonly known as “transit transformation” in the Bay Area. Riders want transit funding to prevent cuts and to make service more convenient and coordinated. Having a clear spending plan for transit transformation investments is important to make sure that the measure delivers promised transit transformation improvements, and to give confidence to leaders in San Mateo and Santa Clara Counties, who are still making decisions about whether to join the measure.

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Adina Levin
The Long Modernization of Italian Railways and Lessons for the US

At our recent webinar, Marco Chitti, fellow at NYU Marron Institute and Transit Costs Project, talked about the "Long Modernization” of Italian railways – delivering major railway improvements over a century through planning and steady, programmatic funding and consistent step-by-step implementation. Find the video and summary in this blog post.

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Kaleo Mark
Governor’s “May Revise” budget proposal cuts public transit; up to legislature to push back

Disappointing budget news for transit riders came on Wednesday, May 14 when Governor Newsom proposed slashing funds for transportation service and infrastructure in his updated "May Revise” state budget. The state budget must be negotiated between the governor and the legislature, and it is now in the legislature’s hands to defend and improve support for public transit and active transportation. Read on - and sign up for a webinar to learn more about what’s going on and how you can take action to save transit in the state budget.

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Adina Levin
San Mateo and Santa Clara County inch closer toward regional transit funding measure

Last week, San Mateo and Santa Clara Counties inched closer toward participating in a regional transportation funding measure. San Mateo County softened its shocking position against funding seamless transit, and both counties are negotiating on governance options for the funds. The VTA board reviewed polling data which showed voters were equally supportive of a regional and local 0.5% sales tax. In its discussion, the board leaned toward participating in the regional tax at a 0.5% level, while maintaining a backup of a new 0.5% county-specific tax in 2028 that would renew and increase the local tax. 

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Adina Levin
San Mateo County agencies recommend removing popular transit coordination - without board approval

Three San Mateo County agencies have recommended eliminating funding for transit coordination initiatives from the upcoming regional transportation funding measure authorizing legislation. This includes cutting funds for wildly popular initiatives like all-agency transit passes, free transfers, schedule coordination, and coordinated paratransit. If you live, work, or travel in San Mateo County, then we need you to speak up tomorrow, May 1st at the Caltrain and SMCTA board meetings, and at the SamTrans and C/CAG meetings next week. 

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Adina Levin
Palo Alto joins all-agency BayPass

The Palo Alto City Council approved an agreement to join the all-agency BayPass pilot, with $94,640 purchase of all agency transit passes.  The City had previously participated in the single-agency Caltrain GoPass to support sustainable commuting, but found that many employees work in city locations further from the Caltrain station and/or live in places that aren’t on the Caltrain corridor.

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Adina Levin
Two bills streamline building public transportation

This year, the California legislature is considering two bills to streamline building public transportation. SB 71 will permanently exempt sidewalk, bike lane, and bus lane projects from CEQA. SB445 sets timelines for utilities and local governments to approve permits for sustainable transportation projects, and empowers agencies to advance work should the timelines not be met. These bills will help reduce two causes that frequently delay rail and transit projects. Seamless Bay Area supports these bills.

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Adina Levin
July deadline to hash out regional transit funding measure with built-in seamless transit and open questions

Last week, Senators Wiener and Arreguín announced a new bill that would authorize a regional public transportation funding measure. The first draft of the bill calls for a half-percent sales tax that would fund the regional transit agencies that face likely cuts, including Caltrain, BART, Muni and AC Transit.  The proposed measure includes San Francisco, Alameda and Contra Costa counties, and allows San Mateo and Santa Clara Counties to opt in by July 31. 

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Adina Levin