Federal, state, and local governments all play a significant role in funding $300 billion in annual transportation spending. The federal government supplies important capital funding for highways, transit systems, airports, waterways, and ports while also operating the nation’s air traffic control system. State and local governments have an equally important task to invest in and operate their transportation networks and rely on a broad range of revenue sources, from general revenues and debt, to fuel taxes, fees, and tolls.

House Appropriators Approve Spending Plan for FY23

House Subcommittee Approves FY23 DHS Funding

House Appropriators Release First Half of FY 2023 Spending Bills

FHWA Solicits Applications for $2.4B in Bridge Project Funding

Gas Prices, Adjusted for Inflation, Now Highest Since 2008

Annual Update: Lost Gas Tax Purchasing Power, 2021 Edition

FY23 Appropriations Process Begins in House

Highway Construction Costs Jumped At Least 7.3 Percent in 2021

Webinar: The IIJA in Play: Six Months Later

The Creation of Contract Authority, June 1922

CBO Shares Predictably Bad HTF Outlook, but Evidence of COVID Aid Replacing Transit Spending
Refreshing the Status Quo: Federal Highway Programs and Funding Distribution

This year, the federal government gave $45.6 billion in highway “formula” funding to the 50 states and the District of Columbia. The state-by-state distribution of this money was based almost entirely on how the states fared on a variety of real-world metrics back in calendar year 2007,...
Eno’s Transit Cost & Project Delivery Research

Eno is undertaking a research, policy, and communications project to analyze current and historical trends in transit project delivery
