The Durham-Chapel Hill-Carrboro Metropolitan Planning Organization awarded Chapel Hill Transit more than $1 million, which will be used to purchase new buses. The Metropolitan Planning Organization (MPO) is the regional organization responsible for transportation planning for the western part of the Research Triangle area in North Carolina.
“The MPO has an interest in making sure all transit agency service systems are in good repair,” said Ellen Beckman, transportation planner with the MPO. “We’re pleased that Chapel Hill Transit chose to use the funds in this way.”
Chapel Hill Transit has the largest fleet of buses in the Durham and Orange County area, with 121 vehicles.
Chapel Hill Transit and other public transit services across the country have been struggling to find the money to provide solid public transit for the past decade.
“We receive funds on an annual basis,” Beckman said. “I would expect we would continue to support and direct some of these funds toward the transit agencies.”
Brian Litchfield, director of Chapel Hill Transit, said the system’s struggle to maintain and replace older buses is not unusual for transit systems or public services in general.
“Resources are incredibly tight all around, and that’s something we’ll continue to work with our partners,” he said.
Daniel Rodriguez, a professor in UNC’s Department of City & Regional Planning, said federal government funding in transit has been pretty flat, while local and state participation have both increased.