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

Transit Vote 2016: Raleigh’s Chance to Grow Smarter

Map: Wakeup Wake County
Wake County's transit package would build 20 miles of BRT and bring frequent bus service to 83 additional miles of streets -- vastly expanding the extent of bus routes that run at least every 15 minutes. Map: Wakeup Wake County
false

We continue our overview of what’s at stake in the big transit ballot initiatives this November with a look at Wake County, North Carolina. Previous installments in this series examined Indianapolis, Seattle, Detroit, and Atlanta.

Ask Wake County Commissioner Sig Hutchinson how Raleigh's transit system is currently functioning, and he doesn't sugarcoat it.

"I just really don’t think we’ve got a functional transit system now," says Hutchinson. "It’s definitely not something you can rely on for people to get to work."

The booming Raleigh area has only 17 miles of bus routes where buses run at least every 15 minutes. There's no high-capacity service like rail or BRT. And if you need to take the bus somewhere on a Sunday, good luck.

Voters have a chance to change that next Tuesday. On the ballot in Wake County is a measure to raise $2.3 billion over 10 years to improve and expand the transit system, via a half-cent sales tax and a $10 increase in vehicle registration fees. The package would enable the region to quadruple the extent of frequent local bus service, build 20 additional miles of frequent-running BRT routes with dedicated bus lanes and off-board fare collection, and construct a 37-mile commuter rail connection to Durham.

Durham and Chapel Hill, Raleigh's neighbors in the "Research Triangle," have already passed half-cent transit sales taxes to fund transit connections between the three cities. Raleigh is the missing link.

In 2014, Hutchinson was one of four new county commissioners elected on a pro-transit platform. The team made the vote a referendum on the Republican-controlled commission, which had refused to move the transit measure to the ballot. In their campaign, the four candidates warned that Raleigh could end up "like Atlanta," -- congested, sprawling -- without transit investment.

The message resonated. Hutchinson and his slate ousted the anti-transit commissioners in a landslide, making way for the transit measure.

"Wake County’s a million people, the region’s about 2.5 million," said Hutchinson. "We’re going to double in size again in the next 30, 35 years. Everyone’s recognizing that congestion’s getting worse and we need more options."

According to Hutchinson, one of the biggest benefits of the transit plan is that it will help organize the region's rapid growth around walkable, transit-accessible locations. About 63 new residents move to Wake County every day. Right now, they mostly move to sprawl.

A "Yes" vote on Tuesday will open up opportunities for new types of transit-oriented housing. The transit expansion would bring 50 percent of residents and 70 percent of jobs in Wake County within a half mile of a bus or rail stop of any type, according to the Moving Wake Forward campaign. If the measure passes, the region is going to develop a joint land-use and transportation plan to make the most of its investment.

The measure has the support of the Raleigh Chamber of Commerce, all 12 municipalities in the county, and a coalition of interests, from the association of realtors, to disability advocates, to the Raleigh News & Observer.

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog New York City

Beach Reading: Zohran Mamdani’s Answers to Streetsblog’s Mayoral Candidate Survey

Spend the holiday weekend with Zohran Mamdani's answers to Streetsblog's mayoral candidate questionnaire.

July 4, 2025

Friday Video: Why NYC Needs ‘Low-Traffic Neighborhoods’

London's Church Street, like so many of our business corridors, was choking on cars — until the advent of the low-traffic neighborhood.

July 4, 2025

Friday’s Headlines: E-Bikes in Parks … Permanently Edition

The Parks Department will permanently allow e-bikes in city parks following a two-year pilot. Plus more news.

July 4, 2025

Anti-Miracle On 34th Street: Adams Administration Pauses Work On 34th Street Busway

The highly-anticipated 34th Street busway may not happen under Mayor Adams after all, sources said.

July 3, 2025

Manhattan DA Says Alleged Central Park Hit-and-Run Cyclist Didn’t Flee, Drops Charges

Prosecutors said the 30-year-old cyclist "remained on the scene for about 45 minutes after the crash and waited for paramedics to arrive to treat the injured person."

Sean Duffy’s ‘Great America Road Trip’ Wants You to Drive to Central Park

Sean Duffy's "Great American Road Trip" encourages Americans to drive to sites in the most transit-rich and car-choked parts of the country.

July 3, 2025
See all posts