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Delving into PBOT’s 2010-2011 budget


BTA New Year's Day Ride-15
A fund to help pay for more
bike boulevards will be
doubled in the coming year.
(Photo © J. Maus)

With budget season heating up it’s time to delve into what the Bureau of Transportation has in mind for bikes in the coming fiscal year.

Last year the budget was created in what Mayor Adams referred to as a “very difficult environment.” One proposal (that thankfully did not come to pass) was to trim the city’s spending on Safe Routes to School by 40%.

Things are much different this year.

Because of the Jobs and Transportation Act of 2009 (H.B. 2001), the PBOT budget will see its first significant influx of money from the State of Oregon for the first time in a decade. As we reported back in November, H.B. 2001 will pump $14 million into local transportation projects (from a mix of gas tax and motor vehicle registration fee increases).

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The question now is, how will PBOT prioritize that money? According to PBOT spokesperson Cheryl Kuck, the money will be allocated along priorities set in Mayor Sam Adams’ 2008 Safe, Sound and Green Streets effort (which failed to pass City Council, but the outreach and research that went into it is still used).

Kuck says the $14 million will go primarily toward repaving major arterials, upgrading City bridges, improved crossings near transit stops, and a host of other projects — including new bike facilities and other traffic safety projects.

With the influx of cash from H.B. 2001 the City also plans to double the “Affordable Transportation Fund” from $500,000 to $1 million in the coming fiscal year (which runs from July 2010 to June 2011). That fund was created last April by Mayor Adams by putting a portion of utility franchise fees into a fund for biking and walking infrastructure (it was initially called the “Bicycle Infrastructure Improvement Fund”).

PBOT wants the additional $500,000 to pay for continued progress on the their bike boulevard plans.

Adding in another H.B. 2001 allocation of $500,000 for “sidewalk improvements” and $500,000 from the General Transporation Revenue account (which totals $85.6 million), PBOT plans to dedicate $2 million of their capital budget to biking and walking projects in the coming fiscal year.

Despite the budget boost from Salem, PBOT must cut 4% from their General Fund. According to Kuck, that equates to cuts totaling $260,682. To meet the reduction goal, PBOT plans to cut $245,219 from “street lighting operations and maintenance,” $3,479 from their “transportation demand management sustainability programs,” and 11,989 from “downtown marketing services.”

All bureaus must submit their final budget to the Office of Management and Finance by February 1st. Stay tuned for more coverage of the budget process.

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