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Multimodal transportation bill killed in Senate committee

All eyes on big transportation bill to fix Colorado roads
The Road Runner Stage Lines run a daily trip between Grand Junction and Durango.

DENVER – Another avenue on the route to addressing Colorado’s transportation funding crisis was shut down Tuesday.

Senate Bill 205, which would have used a sale tax increase of .25 of a cent for 20 years to fund a $4 billion bonding measure, was killed by the Senate Transportation Committee on a unanimous vote at the sponsor’s request.

A major concern was the bill’s focus on transit on the Front Range and dedication of significant funding toward its development and deployment.

Of the $4 billion bond, $500 million would have gone toward passenger rail service along Interstate 25, with an additional $350 million toward multimodal infrastructure around the state.

This would have left $3.15 billion to be directed toward the Colorado Department of Transportation’s priority list, which is projected to require $9 billion over the next decade.

Sen. John Kefalas, D-Fort Collins, said constituents asked him to bring SB 205 to the table to ease commuting on the Front Range.

But that would have dedicated more funding to those communities, on top of the hundreds of millions of dollars outlined by CDOT for transportation projects.

Kefalas said before the hearing that many stakeholders had withdrawn from discussions on SB 205 to focus on House Bill 1242, which uses a larger tax increase to raise funding for a more comprehensive transportation plan. The HB 1242 plan includes dedicating money to rural areas for improving transportation.

It also dedicates a portion of its funding to multimodal options through a grant program that matches money paid by local governments.

Including alternative forms of transportation was an important part of any transportation package brought forward, Kefalas said. “It’s important to keep sending the message that multimodal transportation systems are the solution to Colorado’s transportation woes.”

Now, there’s more pressure on HB 1242.

“At this point, all the eggs are in one basket,” Kefalas said.