METRO Magazine Logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

L.A. Metro Approves Funding for Final Phase of Foothill Gold Line

L.A. Metro has approved a $798 million funding agreement to build the final phase of the Foothill Gold Line. Most of the project’s funding is coming from the State of California’s TIRCP Program.

L.A. Metro representatives presenting the final funding for the Foothills Gold Line project.

Regional leaders from the San Gabriel Valley celebrating approval of funding agreement for 3.2-mile, two-station Foothill Gold Line light rail project from Pomona to Montclair on Oct. 31, 2024, in Los Angeles, Calif. – From Left to Right: La Verne Mayor Tim Sandoval, Arcadia Mayor Pro Tem Sharon Kwan, California State Senator Anthony Portantino, Los Angeles County Supervisor Hilda Solis (front), California State Assembly Member Chris Holden (back), Los Angeles County Supervisor Kathryn Barger (front), Pomona Mayor Tim Sandoval (back), Claremont Council Member Ed Reece (front), Glendale Council Member Ara Najarian (back), Construction Authority CEO Habib F. Balian (front), Montclair Council Member Bill Ruh (back), Glendora Mayor Mendell Thompson, Montclair Mayor John Dutrey, and Chino Hills Council Member Ray Marquez.

Photo: LA Metro

3 min to read


The Foothill Gold Line Construction Authority (Construction Authority) announced that the Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority (Metro) Board approved a $798 million amendment to the ongoing funding agreement between the agencies.

The approved amendment will complete the Los Angeles County portion of the final 3.2 mile, two-station construction segment from Pomona to Montclair.

Ad Loading...

Under the terms of the agreement, Metro will utilize a State of California Transit and Intercity Rail Capital Program (TRICP) grant to pay for their portion of the project. The project was named the agency’s number one priority for new state funding in 2023. The San Bernardino County Transportation Authority (SBCTA) has dedicated $80 million of state and local funding for the portion of the project in San Bernardino County.

“Completing this project is essential to the future of this corridor and to the region,” stated Construction Authority Board Chair and Claremont City Council Member Ed Reece. “This project will expand mobility with reliable and sustainable transit, reducing emissions and improving quality of life for all. We sincerely appreciate Metro's commitment to completing this number one priority project.”

The approved funding agreement amendment between the two agencies defines the processes needed for Metro to fund work and collaborate with the Construction Authority, as well as sets the foundation for identifying and implementing a detailed budget and means for disbursement, tracking, and management of funds.

It expands the scope of work that the Construction Authority can utilize the county’s funding to include the Los Angeles County portion of the final project segment from Pomona to Montclair.

“The San Gabriel Valley Legislative Caucus made completing the Foothill Gold Line to Claremont and Montclair a top priority after the original six-station project had to be shortened in 2018 due to funding constraints,” stated State Assembly Member Chris Holden, whose district includes both of the future station cities of Claremont and Montclair. “We fought hard to get the funding to stay in the State budget these past two cycles and I want to thank Metro for utilizing the funds quickly to get to work building more transit in Los Angeles.”

Ad Loading...

The Construction Authority is currently underway to hire the design-build team for the shovel-ready project. The Authority expects to award a contract in Spring 2025 and break ground later in the year.

The final project segment will complete the Foothill Gold Line’s 25-station system, being built in four construction segments.

It will provide a safe, reliable transit alternative to driving the busy 210 and 10 freeways and offer connections with Metrolink’s San Bernardo Line at both the Claremont and Montclair stations. A future trip from Montclair to Pasadena should take just over 40 minutes, and a trip from Montclair to Los Angeles would be about 75 minutes.

“Next year will be an historic year for the Foothill Gold Line, and I am incredibly proud of the progress we are making,” added Chair Reece. “In addition to completing construction on the four-station project segment from Glendora to Pomona the first week of 2025; the Construction Authority will also be able to break ground on the final segment – bringing us one major step closer to completing the agency’s legislative mandate.”

More New Mobility

New Mobilityby StaffJanuary 30, 2026

Chicago's Pace Expands VanGo Mobility Program

The service is a flexible, reservation-based transit service designed to close the first- and last-mile gaps and connect riders to employment for just $5 per day.

Read More →
BusJanuary 22, 2026

Biz Briefs: BART, Uber Launch Partnership and More

Stay informed with these quick takes on the projects and companies driving progress across the transportation landscape.

Read More →
SponsoredJanuary 19, 2026

3 New Ways Fleet Software Pays: ROI opportunities for modern fleet managers

Transit agencies depend on safe, reliable vehicles to deliver consistent service. This eBook examines how next-generation fleet software helps agencies move from reactive processes to proactive operations through automated maintenance, real-time safety insights, and integrated data. Learn how fleets are improving uptime, safety outcomes, and operational efficiency.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Transit signal priority and public transit agencies.
New Mobilityby Alex RomanJanuary 16, 2026

How AI is Redefining Transit Operations and Signal Priority

In a recent episode of METROspectives, LYT CEO Timothy Menard discusses how artificial intelligence, cloud connectivity, and real-time data are transforming traffic management, boosting bus reliability, and enabling system-wide transit optimization across cities.

Read More →
New Mobilityby StaffJanuary 15, 2026

U.S. Transit Trails Global Peers, Transportation for America Report Outlines Path Forward

The analysis finds that a $4.6 trillion investment across all levels of government over 20 years ($230 billion per year) would be required to build, operate, and maintain a transit network that approaches the level of service within a cohort of 17 global cities with world-class transit systems.

Read More →
RailJanuary 15, 2026

Biz Briefs: Alstom Supplying TTC Subways, SilverRide Lands California Contracts, and More

Stay informed with these quick takes on the projects and companies driving progress across the transportation landscape.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Railby Staff and News ReportsJanuary 9, 2026

Biz Briefs: Hitachi Rail, GreenPower, and More

Stay informed with these quick takes on the projects and companies driving progress across the transportation landscape.

Read More →
An image of a woman exiting a Via microtransit fane with text reading "How to Scale Microtransit Through Data."
New Mobilityby Elora HaynesJanuary 8, 2026

Microtransit’s Next Chapter: Data, Equity, and Job Access at Scale

Via data shows microtransit boosts job access, equity, and commutes when designed to feed fixed routes, not compete with them.

Read More →
New Mobilityby Alex RomanJanuary 5, 2026

Forest River Working to Redefine Reliability, Responsibility in the Bus Industry

As the transportation landscape continues to evolve in the wake of the pandemic, few manufacturers have faced, or embraced, change as decisively as Forest River Bus.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Technologyby Staff and News ReportsDecember 24, 2025

Biz Briefs: Electric Paratransit Buses in San Francisco and More

Biz Briefs covers the latest supplier news in the motorcoach and public transit industries.

Read More →