top of page

Ohio Still Fails Public Transit Riders as Debate Begins on Next Biennial ODOT Budget

I’ve heard it often from my fellow Ohioans: “Public transit just isn’t convenient for me” or “The bus doesn’t go where I want to go or...

I’ve heard it often from my fellow Ohioans: “Public transit just isn’t convenient for me” or “The bus doesn’t go where I want to go or...

November 22, 2022

Stu Nicholson

I’ve heard it often from my fellow Ohioans: “Public transit just isn’t convenient for me” or “The bus doesn’t go where I want to go or when I want to go.”


The answer to why is simple. The State of Ohio has historically and grossly underfunded public transit.


Advocates like All Aboard Ohio and our allies won a sizeable increase from the Ohio General Assembly for public transit funding in 2019 and saved that increase from being cut by the DeWine administration in the following two-year budget.


But even the rescue of $73 million a year for transit funding amounted to barely 2.5-percent of the total ODOT budget.


The State of Ohio’s own 2015 Transportation Needs Study recommended a minimum investment of 10 percent by the year 2025, which would have amounted to $185 million a year. We are far from there, still.


Who gets left standing at the bus stop? We all do, whether we ride or not. The State of Ohio still fails all of us who could or do ride public transit. How?


  • It fails our economy by limiting our ability to access jobs, education, health care, and more.

  • It fails our economy by not providing either new or existing businesses access to the largest and most mobile workforce possible.

  • It fails our environment by forcing more Ohioans to drive because they have no other option and creating more automotive emissions and fossil fuel use.

  • It fails our cities and suburbs by limiting the kind of connectivity that can benefit our communities.

  • It fails urban and rural Ohio and Ohio’s aging population by creating obstacles to accessing daily needs as simple as going to the dentist, the bank, or to a better grocery for more nutritious food.


We are All Aboard Ohio, which means we are not just about passenger rail. We are also about better, faster, more convenient public transit that moves Ohioans where they want to go and when they want to go.


But with this upcoming ODOT biennial budget, we cannot just ask for funding that holds the line. We must go in asking for more. Why not ask for the $185 million a year that is on ODOT’s own study books in black and white?


Yes, commuting patterns are changing. Not every job is “downtown” today. The Covid pandemic accelerated that situation. But our workforce didn’t disappear. It’s shifting. It had already been shifting into huge distribution centers that are not always served by local transit system as these centers are built in mostly rural locations, miles from a bus line and leaving employees no choice but to spend significant parts of their paychecks to drive their own cars from home to the job and back...... if they have or can afford a car.


Nothing brought that into stronger focus than the announcement a patch of rural Central Ohio land outside of New Albany had been picked for two major INTEL computer chip manufacturing plants projected to create over 20,000 jobs.


But when that news broke, it became immediately clear that the only transportation consideration made was to widen State Route 161 and add two new highway interchanges. Nothing......nothing....was even mentioned about transit. After All Aboard Ohio Board Chair Theresa Allen’s op-ed appeared in the Columbus Dispatch, it got that conversation going over what role transit could and should play in connecting people to these new jobs and more jobs to follow.


But conversations like these beg the question: Why does Ohio continue to underfund public transportation?


Let’s be asking that question of Ohio legislators and Governor DeWine....today....and not when they put a budget figure in front of the General Assembly in January.


The best connective transportation tissue Ohio can develop to move the workforce of our future is great local public transit that connects with an equally great intercity passenger rail network. Your phone calls, letters, and emails to the state legislators and the Governor you elected in November need to carry that message.

Support Us

We're the largest passenger rail and transit advocate in Ohio. Help us make a difference in the Midwest.

ConnectedPoster - 9.jpg

Stu Nicholson

Our Mission

We advocate for better transit and passenger rail throughout the Midwest. Your support helps us.

St. Louis must spend $1.4 million to modify new trains that are too tall for their tunnels, but Cleveland cannot acquire these units due to critical voltage and door incompatibilities. Despite sharing the Siemens S200 model name, the fleets are mechanically unique, validating GCRTA's decision to custom-engineer its own vehicles rather than relying on shared designs.

AAO Blog Post

"Wrong" Trains are the Same Model as Cleveland. Measurement Mistakes in St. Louis

Make a huge impact on our 2026 initiatives by donating to our $5,000 goal this Giving Tuesday 12/2. In 2025 we accomplished a lot, track what we did by month, thanks to donor impact and passenger rail advocates in Ohio.

AAO Blog Post

Donor Impact Across Ohio: How AAO Delivered in 2025

Midwest passenger trains are selling out more often and ridership is climbing in the region. In Ohio this is a sign of future success but lack of new trains may constrain abilities to grow.

News Story

Midwest Rail Sees "Growth Spurt," - Ohio Routes Could Flourish

The Streamline Transit Act cuts federal red tape, allowing Ohio to fast-track rail NEPA reviews like highways. This could save years and millions on projects like a Cincinnati, Columbus, Dayton, Cleveland rail corridor.

Featured Post

Passenger Rail Projects Could Speed Along Under New Bipartisan Bill

ABOUT ALL ABOARD OHIO
All Aboard Ohio is a non-profit, member-based organization dedicated to promoting improved public transportation and passenger rail service throughout the state. 

Founded in 1973 and incorporated as a registered 501c-3 in 1987, All Aboard Ohio has spent more than 50 years advocating, educating, and working towards our goal of a connected Midwest

All Aboard Ohio is a 501c-3 nonprofit with over 50 years of advocacy work, advocating for improved public transportation and passenger rail service in the Midwest

©2025 by All Aboard Ohio

Get in Touch

Contact us form

info@allaboardohio.org

3136 Kingsdale Center, 


#112 Columbus, OH 43221

Federal Tax ID: 31-1066182

  • Facebook
  • X
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • Threads

All Aboard Ohio is a 501c-3 nonprofit with over 50 years of advocacy work, advocating for improved public transportation and passenger rail service in the Midwest

Cleveland Tower Photo by cmh2315fl on Flickr (CC)

©2025 by All Aboard Ohio

Get in Touch

Contact us form

info@allaboardohio.org

3136 Kingsdale Center, 


#112 Columbus, OH 43221

Federal Tax ID: 31-1066182

  • Instagram
  • Bluesky
  • Threads
  • Youtube
  • Facebook
  • X
  • LinkedIn
bottom of page