Transportation for America explained

Transportation for America
Formation:[1]
Type:501(c)(3) organization
Purpose:Advocacy for a transportation system that safely, affordably and conveniently connects people of all means and ability to jobs, services, and opportunity through multiple modes of travel.
Headquarters:1152 15th Street NW, Suite 450, Washington, D.C., U.S.
Region Served:United States
Leader Title:Director
Leader Name:Beth Osborne
Leader Title2:Chair
Leader Name2:John Robert Smith
Parent Organization:Smart Growth America

Transportation for America (or T4A) is an American policy organization that supports progressive transportation and land use policy. The transportation program of Smart Growth America,[2] T4A supports reforming transportation policy at the federal, state, and local levels.

History

During the Trump presidency, the organization criticized the administration over proposed cuts to federal funding for public transit.[3] In 2020, the organization's director Beth Osborne criticized efforts to cut transit funding amid the economic crisis that emerged in the COVID-19 pandemic.

In 2021, T4A urged the Biden administration to allocate increased funding for public transportation.[4] Alongside multiple labor unions and environmental organization, T4A urged the addition of $10 billion in public transit funding in the White House-backed reconciliation bill.[5]

Policy goals

According to the organization, its policy goals include greater investments in public transportation, smart growth, and environmentalism.[6] T4A has engaged with federal policymakers to push for increased funding for public transit.

Membership

In addition to individuals who may participate, T4A's membership roster includes a number of governments, as well as housing, business, environmental, public health, transportation, equitable development, and other organizations.[7]

Leadership

The current director of Transportation for America is Beth Osborne, who formerly served as Acting Assistant Secretary for Transportation Policy and as Deputy Assistant Secretary for Transportation Policy in the Department of Transportation during the Obama administration.[8]

References

  1. Web site: Our History. May 22, 2020.
  2. Web site: 2021-08-24. 2021 Smart Growth America Internship Program. 2021-10-08. Transportation For America. en-US.
  3. News: Laris. Michael. February 10, 2020. Trump administration proposes billions in transportation cuts — and new spending. Washington Post.
  4. Web site: Evers-Hillstrom. Karl. 2021-07-29. Transit advocates want more from bipartisan infrastructure bill. 2021-10-05. The Hill. en.
  5. Web site: Evers-Hillstrom. Karl. 2021-08-30. Coalition urges Democrats to restore $10 billion in transit funding. 2021-10-08. The Hill. en.
  6. http://t4america.org/blueprint/ T4A Blueprint
  7. http://t4america.org/who-we-are/ T4A Coalition Partners
  8. Web site: Beth Osborne. 2021-11-07. Transportation For America. en-US.

External links