The American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials recently unveiled its 38th Survey of State Funding for Public Transportation, which provides a snapshot of state-by-state public transportation investments as well as how state departments of transportation utilize funding and tax mechanisms to support both transit operations and capital projects.
[Above photo by the Missouri DOT.]
Compiled by AASHTO’s Council on Public Transportation, the survey is based on fiscal year 2018 data from 50 state departments of transportation and the District of Columbia.
[On a related note, U.S. Department of Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao recently crafted a special ‘thank you’ message for America’s public transit workers for working through the COVID-19 crisis.]
Some key findings from its report include:
- In FY 2018, states provided $19.2 billion in transit funding while federal funds totaled $12.9 billion.
- States collectively provided $6.3 billion more funding for public transit than the federal government with six states – California, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, New York, and Pennsylvania – accounting for 78 percent of that increased investment.
- Eighteen states and the District of Columbia increased their public transit funding in FY 2018 by a total of $669 million over FY 2017 levels, whereas 17 states registered a decline in transit funding and 15 states reported no change in transit funding levels. That includes four states – Alabama, Hawaii, Nevada, and Utah – that do not fund public transit.
- Federal funds accounted for more than 50 percent of the total transit funding in 37 states, while state funding exceeded federal funding in only 14 states.

New Members Named to Two AASHTO Committees
September 22, 2023