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Money For California Roads
Article Source: CA Governor Newsom
California invested $13 billion this year to build safer, more
climate-resilient roads and highways, faster What you need to know:
Since 2022, nearly $38 billion has been invested in transportation
projects across California, creating an estimated 420,000 jobs.
SACRAMENTO – California invested nearly $13 billion in just the last
year to enhance transportation safety, increase accessibility for
people who walk and bike, support infrastructure in underserved
communities across both rural and urban parts of the state, and create
a more sustainable highway system that is resilient to climate change.
With the California Transportation Commission closing out 2024 with
$830 million in allocations just this month, it has allocated nearly
$38 billion since 2022 for transportation projects that have helped
fuel the world’s fifth largest economy and created approximately
420,000 jobs.
On top of this funding, just yesterday, the Biden-Harris Administration
announced $135 million to help purchase hundreds more clean trucks in
California. The funding is critical to the state’s efforts to
transition to clean trucks – vital to cutting pollution and protecting
the health of communities historically left behind.
The transportation projects receiving funding are a critical component
of Governor Gavin Newsom’s build more, faster agenda delivering
infrastructure upgrades across the state. Find projects building your
community at build.ca.gov.
From fixing bridges long in need of repairs and extending and improving
rail lines to building more accessible sidewalks and adding new
electric buses, California is upgrading our transportation system in
ways not seen for generations. We’re building more, faster, and we’re
creating hundreds of thousands of jobs for folks working in the very
communities they grew up in.
A large portion of the funding was derived from the landmark federal
Bipartisan Infrastructure Law and from Senate Bill 1, the Road Repair
and Accountability Act of 2017. The Bipartisan Infrastructure Law,
formally known as the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA),
contributed more than $6.5 billion to the year-long effort, while SB 1
funded another $2.7 billion.
The state has invested in an expansive and versatile portfolio of 885
projects during 2024 that reflect the demands of a diverse and
ever-changing economy that ranks among the largest in the world.
“The future of California’s transportation system relies on providing
safer, more equitable and accessible travel options for all
Californians and people who visit our majestic state from across the
world,” said Caltrans Director Tony Tavares. “The significant funding
levels allow Caltrans to forge ahead with its mission to connect
communities and manage infrastructure assets that serve as the economic
and cultural lifeblood of our neighborhoods for now and into the
future.”
All regions of California, from a wildlife crossing in the northernmost
part of Siskiyou County to better pavement at the border with Mexico,
received funding. Projects will be constructed on major interstates in
metropolitan areas and small highways in the state’s more rural
enclaves. They range in scale from a $298,000 safety improvement
project in Tahoe City to a $254.2 million effort to improve freight
mobility along the Interstate 15 corridor through Riverside and San
Bernardino counties.
Among the improvements are hundreds of miles of new bike lanes, funding
for cleaner-fuel technology across the transportation system, hydrogen
fueling stations, improving numerous bridges, increasing rail
opportunities and new systems to better connect California’s vast
animal habitats.
Below is a sample of approved projects that will improve lives for Californians, regardless of their travel mode:
A plan to fix and expand sidewalks, provide separate bike paths and
upgrades to ADA curbs, lighting systems and traffic management elements
in San Luis Obispo County. Similar efforts will be underway in the
cities of Redding, Berkeley and Pismo Beach as well as in the
Wilmington community near the Port of Los Angeles and in the City
Heights section of San Diego.
New electric buses and chargers in Santa Barbara as well as the
installation of four hydrogen fueling stations in Riverside County near
the I-215/SR-60 interchange.
Replacing the Ackerman Creek Bridge in Mendocino County, repairing
damaged bridges along Interstate 80 in Alameda County and restoring the
Vincent Thomas Bridge in Los Angeles.
An extension of the BART system into San Jose,
improvements to the rail station in North Hollywood, and safety
improvements to two commuter rail crossings in Montebello and four
at-risk locations in Orange County and the North Coast Corridor in San
Diego County.
Improved wildlife crossings near Tehachapi and stream restoration efforts in Humboldt County.