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Conservancy Report Projects ROI from Active Transportation Investments

Photo by DDOT

A new report from the Rails-to-Trails Conservancy projects that shifting short trips from driving to walking and biking via connected active-transportation infrastructure could help generate a return on investment of $73 billion to $138 billion per year in the United States if connected to public transit systems.

[Above photo by the District of Columbia Department of Transportation.]

“More than half of all trips in the United States are within a 20-minute bike ride or less, and more than one in four trips are within a 20-minute walk or less, according to the 2017 National Household Travel Survey,” Rails-to-Trails said in its 62-page report. “Even so, the majority of these short trips are taken by automobile.”

Photo by DDOT

The organization went on to argue in a statement that shifting short car trips in both urban and rural areas to non-motorized ones “will take policy, behavior and perception change, which can only occur if connected networks of safe and protected walking and bicycling facilities are built all across the nation.”

A key factor in its savings calculation argument is building more “synergy” between active transportation and public transportation. Currently, Rails-to-Trails said 2.5 percent of all trips and 5 percent of work trips are made using public transit. To maximize the savings for investments in active transportation networks, the group said:

A reduction in medical care costs is also touted as a “side benefit” to the active transportation investments highlighted in the Rails-to-Trails report.

Photo by Caltrans

“For example, in Lincoln, Nebraska, one dollar invested in trails saved $2.94 in direct medical costs,” it said. “Taken at a national scale, more physical activity could put billions more in the pockets of Americans. Finally, employers also benefit from increased physical activity among their workers in the form of increased productivity and reduced absenteeism … benefits that are not calculated in this report.”

State departments of transportation across the country are engaged in a variety of efforts to boost active transportation options.

For example, the Ohio Department of Transportation released its Walk.Bike.Ohio plan in July; a plan designed to guide Ohio’s bike and pedestrian transportation policies and investments in infrastructure, as well as examining how “new mobility” and its associated technologies will impact how Ohioans walk and bike in the future.

Jim Tymon

“Our state DOT members are no longer focused on just highways and roads; they’re emphasizing a multimodal focus,” Jim Tymon, executive director of the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials, explained during a presentation at the National Bike Summit 2019 in March.

“They are more focused on overall mobility needs; how can we get all modes of transportation to operate in a safe way to move people and goods most effectively and efficiently to their final destinations,” he said.

“That is why we’re supporting the inclusion of multimodal mobility considerations in AASHTO’s work and publications – including transportation design guides such as the Green Book,” Tymon noted. “We need to make sure folks understand the positive impacts a well-functioning transportation system has on their quality of life.”