Skip to Content
Streetsblog New York City home
Streetsblog New York City home
Log In
Streetsblog

Pennsylvania Transportation Bill a “Dramatic Win” for Biking and Walking

There's a lot to like in the new $2.3 billion transportation package passed by the Pennsylvania House of representatives last week.

Seated at table, left to right: Sen. John Rafferty, Governor Tom Corbett, Sen. John Wozniak, and PennDOT Secretary Barry Schoch. Behind 3rd and 1st from right: Bicycle Coalition of Greater Philadelphia director Alex Doty, and Philadelphia Deputy Mayor Rina Culter. Image: ##http://blog.bicyclecoalition.org/2013/11/pennsylvania-transportation-bill-signed.html## BCGP##
Signing the law last week: Pennsylvania leaders including Governor Tom Corbett (seated, second from left), PennDOT Secretary Barry Schoch (seated far right), Bicycle Coalition of Greater Philadelphia Director Alex Doty (standing third from right), and Philadelphia Deputy Mayor Rina Cutler (standing far right). Image: ##http://blog.bicyclecoalition.org/2013/11/pennsylvania-transportation-bill-signed.html##BCGP##
false

Philadelphia transit agency SEPTA gets a big funding boost, enough to spare disastrous service cuts. Pittsburgh transit will also get some much welcome financial stability after years of uncertainty, fare hikes, and threats to service. Meanwhile, advocacy groups are calling increases to biking and walking funds historic. Those will be funded by higher taxes on oil and gas distributors and also small increases in vehicle registration and licensing fees.

Sarah Stuart at Network blog Pennsylvania Walks and Bikes calls the package a "dramatic win" for biking and walking:

Tremendous credit for this success goes to PennDOT Secretary Barry Schoch, who worked diligently for several years to make the case for the nearly $2.4 billion package, and fought hard to keep the issue front and center even after the House was unable to take a vote in June and rejected versions of the bill twice on Monday night.

What will this bill do for biking and walking? A lot. As the Secretary told advocates Monday night, “This is the biggest step forward for the bicycle and pedestrian modes of transportation in the history of Pennsylvania.” The bill:

  • Creates a multi-modal fund that grows from $30 to $144 million over a 5-year period, to which bicycle and pedestrian projects can apply for funding;
  • Sets an annual minimum of $2 million of that fund to be spent on bicycle and pedestrian facilities;
  • Makes it easier to use state transportation money for pedestrian safety projects, streetscaping & lighting;
  • Explicitly states that Pennsylvania’s comprehensive transportation system includes Pennsylvania’s “numerous bicycle and pedestrian facilities,” which will make it easier for bicycle/pedestrian projects to compete for highway funds.

The biking and walking community put its oar in the water to help secure this legislative success. With your help, we fought hard for biking and walking to be included in the bill and to receive a minimum-floor amount of the multi-modal fund. This success is a result of years of coalition work with the Keystone Transportation Funding Coalition and the health groups that collaborated on Walk Ride PA.

Elsewhere on the Network today: Systemic Failure reports that San Jose is removing a buffered bike lane, saying its installation was a mistake. Missouri Bike Federation reports that the state has approved an $8 billion transportation spending package that affords $800 million to local communities. And Seattle Transit Blog says Sound Transit should preserve the transit routes that go to the most densely populated, walkable areas.

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog New York City

Safe Streets, Workers Rights, Crash Victims Targeted By Big Tech In Super Bowl Ads

Some Super Bowl commercials are ads. And some are warning shots.

February 10, 2026

Opinion: The City, Not Just Lyft, Deserves Blame for Citi Bike’s Winter Mess

The Mamdani administration should fine Lyft for falling short of its contractual obligations — and reward it for meeting or surpassing them.

February 10, 2026

Tuesday’s Headlines: A Gateway to Nothing Edition

The Gateway Tunnel project remains stalled to allow President Trump to appeal. Plus other news from a busy day.

February 10, 2026

Queens Pol Trolls Her Own Constituents From Her Ticket-Covered Lincoln As They March For Car-Free Parks

Queens Council Member Joann Ariola mocked her own constituents in an "adolescent" and "antagonistic" move just because some people want a car-free park.

February 9, 2026

Snow Problem: Can New York City Handle Big Winter Storms Anymore?

There are eight million people in the big city. And 32 million opinions on the Mamdani administration's response to its first snow crisis.

February 9, 2026

Video: Another Way The Snow Reveals Our Misallocation of Public Space

New Yorkers barely use their cars and, instead, use them to seize public space.

February 9, 2026
See all posts