Comment Letter for Regional Transit Authorities in the FY2020 Budget – Amendment 1136
Massachusetts State Senate
The State House
Boston, MA 02133
May 16, 2019
Regional Transit Authorities in the FY2020 Budget – Amendment 1136
Honorable Members of the Senate:
We, a group of elected, nonprofit, community, and business leaders who support RTAs and their riders, support amendment 1136, which would provide $90.5 million in base funding for the regional transit authority (RTA) line item (1595-6370) in the FY2020 budget, and identifies separate, additional funding for performance targets and innovations, subject to Memoranda of Understanding (MOUs) between RTAs and MassDOT. Stable base funding is essential to protect riders from service cuts, and for RTAs to provide predictable service as they continue to improve performance and accountability. We are very pleased that the Senate Ways and Means budget includes language that ties state assistance to RTAs to inflation.
To count any MOU-based funding towards the base, as the Senate Ways and Means budget does, amounts to a cut in service which penalizes riders who are transit-dependent. Here is why: MOUs and the underlying performance targets take months to develop, and the transit service that results is not assured to continue. As an example, the $4 million in MOU-based funding that the legislature voted as part of the FY 2019 budget has still not been released, 10 1⁄2 months into the fiscal year, and several service cuts have not been restored as a result.
Senators may recall that the FY 2019 budget also established the Task Force on RTA Performance and Funding. Constituted in October 2018, the Task Force completed its work and delivered a report to the legislature on April 5, 2019, titled A Vision for the Future of Massachusetts’ Regional Transit Authorities.
This Task Force report included several recommendations to improve service. These included $90.5 million in base funding from the state budget; indexing of future state appropriations to CPI; establishment of MOUs with MassDOT to ensure future performance goals; and other recommendations to promote accountable, statewide public transit.
In conclusion, we cite the first recommendation from Choices for Stewardship, the December 2018 report of the Baker Administration’s Commission on the Future of Transportation:
- Prioritize investment in public transit as the foundation for a robust, reliable, clean, and efficient transportation system.
In this spirit, we thank the Senate for making investment in public transit a priority for FY 2020.
Respectfully submitted,
Mayor Jon Mitchell, City of New Bedford
Mayor Daniel Rivera, City of Lawrence
Mayor Alex Morse, City of Holyoke
Mayor Paul Heroux, City of Attleboro
Mayor Stephen L. DiNatale, City of Fitchburg
William F. Martin, Mayor, City of Greenfield
Linda Dunlavy, Executive Director, Franklin Regional Council of Governments
Tim Brennan, Executive Director, Pioneer Valley Planning Commission
Frederick Kidder, President/CEO, SouthCoast Chamber
Maddie Ribble, Director of Public Policy and Campaign Strategy, Massachusetts Public Health Association
Andre Leroux, Executive Director, Massachusetts Smart Growth Alliance
Chris Dempsey, Director, Transportation for Massachusetts
Nancy Goodman, Vice President for Policy, Environmental League of Massachusetts
Stacy Thompson, Executive Director, LivableStreets Alliance
Heather McMann, Executive Director, Groundwork Lawrence
Mayor Donna Holaday, City of Newburyport
Mayor David Narkewicz, City of Northampton
Mayor Thomas W. Bernard, City of North Adams
Cathy Ann Viveiros, City Administrator, City of Fall River
Thomas Matuszko, Executive Director, Berkshire Regional Planning Commission
Marc Draisen, Executive Director, Metropolitan Area Planning Council
Jack Lank, President/CEO, The United Regional Chamber of Commerce
Marie Oliva, President & CEO, Cape Cod Canal Region Chamber
Wendy Garf-Lipp, Executive Director, United Neighbors of Fall River
Janet Domenitz, Executive Director, MASSPIRG
Joseph Kriesberg, President, Massachusetts Association of Community Development Corporations
Deb Pasternak, Chapter Director, Sierra Club, Massachusetts Chapter
John MacDougall, Sylvia Parsons and Jack Spence, Co-Chairs, 350Mass Transportation Working Group
Elena Letona, Executive Director, Neighbor to Neighbor
Wendy Landman, Executive Director, WalkBoston
Scott Zadakis, Director, CrossTown Connect TMA
Judith L. Kirk, Director of Community Impact, YouthConnect Worcester
Kevin McCaffrey, Director of Government and Community Relations and Special Projects, Office of Advancement, Mount Holyoke College
Jim Kolesar, Vice President, Berkshire Interfaith Organizing
Elizabeth Isherwood, Communications Director, Rail to Boston Coalition
Jennifer Lee, Systems Advocate, Stavros
Corinn Williams, Executive Director, Community Economic Development Center
Janie Katz-Christy, Director, Green Streets Initiative
Jessica Collins, Executive Director, Public Health Institute of Western MA
Victoria Waterman, Chief Executive Officer, Girls, Inc. of Worcester
Staci Rubin, Senior Attorney, Conservation Law Foundation
Carolyn Villers, Executive Director, Massachusetts Senior Action Council
Kerry Conaghan, VP Community Impact, United Way of Central Massachusetts
Patty Flanagan, Director of Wellness and Health Equity, YWCA Central Massachusetts
Samuel Masinter, Associate Vice President for College Relations, Smith College
Margaret Coffin, CEO, Center for Living & Working, Inc.
David Connell, Vice President/Chief Human Resource Officer, YMCA of Central Massachusetts
Gordon Hargrove, Executive Director, Friendly House, Inc.
Alan Dallmann, Coordinator The Coalition to End Hunger
Justin Lawson, Fund Mass RTAs
Samuel Martin, Executive Director, Worcester Youth Center
Susan Moriarty, MASS Central Regional Coordinator, Mass Advocates Standing Strong
K. Lev Ben-Ezra, Executive Director, Amherst Survival Center
Deb Fastino, Executive Director, Coalition for Social Justice
Christopher M. O’Keeffe, Vice President for Programs, Greater Worcester Community Foundation
Drew Grande, Clean Energy Program Director, Massachusetts Climate Action Network
Joyce Mandell, Founder and Director, Jane Jacobs in the Woo
Lew Finfer, Co-Director, Massachusetts Communities Action Network
Adam Thielker, Transportation Advocacy Coalition
Liz Hamilton, Executive Director, Boys & Girls Club of Worcester
Joe Bellil, VP of Public Affairs & Youth Services, Easter Seals of Massachusetts
Mary Haroyan, Bay State Council of the Blind
Ali, Amrana and Shabaz Soofi, Worker-Owners, WooRides
Scott Avedisian, CEO, Rhode Island Public Transit Authority