Every day, we hear of federally funded projects being terminated as part of a troubling pivot away from equity and logic. The so-called One Big Beautiful Bill is potentially estimated to rescind over $4.7 billion in competitive grants for transportation alone – including $327 million from a grant to the Allston Multimodal Project to rework a section of the Massachusetts Turnpike. Climate and transportation sector projects are distinctly vulnerable to these terminations and funding pauses, something that brings a worrisome outlook for the future. Transportation contributes to almost 40 percent of emissions in Massachusetts, which highlights its interconnectedness to the climate and, ultimately, to public health. To fulfill Massachusetts’s ambitious goal of achieving net-zero carbon emissions by 2050, we must ensure that we spend every federal dollar we do have to move the state in a cleaner, more equitable direction. A new, interactive tool and analysis shows Massachusetts, compared to other states, largely making progress in spending federal transportation dollars on the right things. Using data from the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act of 2021, this analysis demonstrates that Massachusetts is on track, compared to baseline emissions levels before the 2021 legislation, to reduce over 2.5 million tonnes of CO2 emissions between 2022 and 2040. This is thanks to smart investments in public transit – buses and passenger rail, electrification, and active transportation modes like pedestrian, street, and bike safety infrastructure.
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