Cutting Red Tape to Build Green Transportation

The Problem

Clean Transportation Infrastructure Takes Too Long to Build

Vehicle tailpipes are California’s top source of carbon and air pollution. To meet health, equity, and climate goals, ϴmade the case that the state must build transit, biking, and walking infrastructure much faster.

The Cause

Environmental Review Blocks Clean Transportation Projects

SPUR’s research found that California's environmental review process, CEQA, increases costs and delays biking, transit, and walking infrastructure projects, causing environmental harm. Projects can remain stuck for years, leading to costly appeals and lawsuits.

The Policy Solution

Exempt Clean Projects From Review

ϴcollaborated with the Bay Area Council and Silicon Valley Leadership Group to develop legislation exempting these critical clean transportation infrastructure projects from lengthy and unnecessary reviews. They built a coalition and approached Senator Scott Wiener about authoring a bill to turn the proposal into law.

First Big Win

Legislation Turns Policy Solution Into Law

ϴcollaborated with Senator Wiener, coalition partners, legislators, stakeholders who had initially opposed the bill, and the governor's office to pass the legislation. However, compromises led to a two-year sunset provision.

Immediate Impact

More Clean Transportation Infrastructure

The legislation enabled prominent clean transportation projects like the conversion of San Francisco’s JFK Drive to a linear park, rapid implementation of bus and bike lanes, and retrofitting of maintenance yards for all-electric buses. ϴpartnered with the California Transit Association on research to document the legislation's success.

Second Big Win

Legislation Extended Until the End of the Decade

In 2022, ϴand partners approached Senator Wiener to extend and expand the law, gaining a broader coalition and winning over opponents. The legislation passed, extending streamlining for more clean transportation projects until 2030.

Next Steps

Bike, bus, and walking infrastructure should be built in weeks, not years. ϴcontinues to research obstacles to delivering these projects, with a focus on rapid, low-cost deployment of bus and bike lanes, greenways, slow streets, and charging stations. With additional investment in our work, ϴwill continue working to eliminate carbon emissions and safeguard air quality.