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American Public Transportation Association Hosts 2025 Congressional Fly-In
APTA leaders and members met with lawmakers to advocate for full federal funding of transit and passenger rail, along with policy reforms to accelerate project delivery and strengthen local decision-making.

APTA President and CEO Paul P. Skoutelas and association members met with key Senators and Representatives to discuss FY 2026 transit and rail funding priorities.
Photo: METRO
American Public Transportation Association (APTA) members met with key members of Congress to advocate for robust federal investment in public transportation infrastructure and critical statutory reforms. Both the Senate and House of Representatives have advanced FY 2026 THUD Appropriations bills.
As Congress works to complete the FY 2026 THUD Appropriations bill and develop legislation to succeed the expiring Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA), APTA is calling for $22.3 billion in public transit funding and $21 billion for passenger rail in the upcoming fiscal year.
“Fiscal Year 2026 represents a pivotal moment for the future of public transportation in America,” said Paul P. Skoutelas, president and CEO of APTA. “Every dollar we invest in public transit generates five dollars in long-term economic returns. These aren’t just numbers — they represent real opportunities for communities across our nation to thrive.”
According to an association release, federal public transit and passenger rail investments deliver broad economic benefits, with 77% of funding flowing to the private sector. Every billion dollars invested creates or sustains nearly 50,000 jobs across the entire economy, demonstrating the multiplier effect of transit investment.
APTA Seeks Long-Term Commitment to Transit and Rail
APTA also noted its strong support for the Senate THUD Appropriations bill, which increases public transit investment to more than $21 billion and maintains passenger rail investment at $16.2 billion.
The association urges Congress to reject House provisions that would cut Capital Investment Grants (CIG) to the lowest level in almost 30 years and prohibit funding for specific passenger rail projects.
Looking beyond FY 2026, APTA calls on Congress to build upon current investment levels in the next Surface Transportation Authorization Act, providing $138 billion for public transit and $130 billion for passenger rail over five years. These investments will drive economic growth, create jobs and new opportunities, advance safety, security, and accessibility, and foster innovation.
In addition, APTA urges Congress to advance critical statutory reforms that streamline program requirements and accelerate project delivery, including:
Streamline Statutory Requirements for Public Transit and Passenger Rail (e.g., simplify CIG requirements, eliminate bus spare ratio requirement).
Advance Safety, Security, and Accessibility for Riders, Workers, and Communities (e.g.,establish clear Transit CEO executive authority for agency safety).
Strengthen Collaborative, Local Decision-making (e.g., ensure public transit voting representation on Metropolitan Planning Organizations).
Accelerate Project Delivery and Permitting Reform (e.g., authorize transit agency assumption of environmental responsibility).
“Congress must act now to fully fund public transit and passenger rail, reject harmful cuts to critical programs like Capital Investment Grants, and provide the statutory clarity our industry needs to deliver safe, reliable service,” Skoutelas said.
APTA business members, transit agency CEOs, and transit board members met directly with six Senators and Representatives, including Senator John Curtis (R-UT) and Representatives Jasmine Crockett (D-TX), Tom Kean Jr. (R-NJ), Celeste Maloy (R-UT), Dan Newhouse (R-WA), and Lloyd Smucker (R-PA).
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