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

Feds to Cincinnati: Resume Streetcar or Forfeit $40 Million

Hows does a politician justify spurning millions in federal grants out of supposed concern for the city's budget?

John Cranley, Cincinnati's new mayor, handled that contradiction by telling voters there was some chance that if the city cancelled its federally-funded streetcar project, the money could be used for other things, like rebuilding an interchange.

Streetcar supporters held a press conference yesterday marking the beginning of a signature drive they hope will overturn City Council's decision to pause the Cincinnati streetcar. Image: ##http://www.urbancincy.com/2013/12/the-plot-continues-to-thicken-for-cincinnatis-133m-streetcar-project/## Urban Cincy##
Streetcar supporters held a press conference yesterday marking the beginning of a signature drive they hope will overturn the City Council's decision to pause the Cincinnati streetcar. Image: ##http://www.urbancincy.com/2013/12/the-plot-continues-to-thicken-for-cincinnatis-133m-streetcar-project/##Urban Cincy##
false

It was always a dubious claim, and the Federal Transit Administration just confirmed that Cranley will not be able to use the unspent portion of the $45 million federal grant on whatever he wants. A letter FTA chief Peter Rogoff sent to Cranley this week demanded "unequivocal assurances" by December 19 that the city will proceed with the project under the "FTA-approved" timeline, or the FTA will "immediately terminate all of its grant obligations for the project and initiate a debt collection action to recover money owed.”

The big question is whether an independent audit will show that halting the project will cost the city of Cincinnati more than continuing it would. John Yung at Urban Cincy says Rogoff's letter will compel quick action on that front:

Strong words. It is no wonder Mayor Cranley jumped out in front of the media early on Facebook Friday morning to spin the letter as a positive development for his administration.

But what it also means is that the City of Cincinnati must complete its third financial audit of the project, with KPMG, no later than that date and should make a decision FTA finds satisfactory in order to avoid the loss of $40 million from the Federal government and debt collection on another $5 million of Federal money already spent.

The other immediate question is whether a majority of the City Council will be persuaded to resume streetcar construction. The mayor's refusal to shift his position means that picking up the needed votes in the council will be harder:

Mayor Cranley has gone on the record and stated that he would potentially veto any majority vote by City Council to restart construction and complete the project. Such a move would require the Charter amendment or a 6-3 super majority vote of City Council to override the mayor’s veto.

Elsewhere on the Network today: Bike Portland says that what started as a student project could soon become an official protected bike lane in the city of Eugene. PubliCola explains why Seattle advocates are so disheartened about the transportation bill put forward by Washington lawmakers. And The City Fix offers four ways bus rapid transit helps urban communities.

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog New York City

Cyclists in Criminal Court Say Mamdani’s Bike Crackdown is a ‘Waste of Time’

The hearings reveal that the mayor's promise to end criminal summonsing against cyclists has not been kept.

February 3, 2026

‘Lowballing Victims’: Crash Survivors Furious At Hochul’s Car Insurance Proposal

Crash victims and a key state lawmaker are not yet sold on Hochul's car insurance scheme, and hope that the state listens.

February 3, 2026

Opinion: Transit Watchword Should Be Synergy, Not Scarcity

Two fantastic transit ideas — fast and free buses, and a 17-percent expansion of subway mileage — are being set up as adversaries. But they're complementary.

February 3, 2026

Does Hochul’s 125th Street Subway Have to Be That Expensive?

The western extension of the Second Avenue Subway has a $7.7-billion price tag that calls into question the very logic of building it at all — but advocates and researchers say the train is a good idea that could cost a lot less with some minor alterations.

February 3, 2026

Tuesday’s Headlines: ‘Stop Super Speeders’ Edition

The Super Bowl is Sunday in Santa Clara for sports fans, but it's today in Albany for us. Plus other news.

February 3, 2026

The Explainer: How Gov. Hochul’s Car Insurance Agenda Hurts Victims, Helps Big Car, Big Insurance

Why is Hochul fighting for worse insurance protections for victims of traffic violence?

February 2, 2026
See all posts