Transforming our transportation system at the state level.

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Let’s build a transportation system for how we move today and how we will move tomorrow.

Transportation policy and funding can—and should—create vibrant communities across our state. It’s time to think differently about transportation to get Minnesotans moving. We can improve our transportation system while promoting racial and economic justice, creating fiscal and economic prosperity, and supporting the vibrant communities across Minnesota.

i-94 from the pedestrian bridge by augsburg, with the chain link fence in focus

We’ve built our transportation system on the false premise that we should move as many cars as possible from point A to point B, and it’s failing us. Minnesota has the nation’s fourth-largest road network by lane miles, far exceeding what our population, economy, or farm-to-market needs require, and we can’t afford to maintain it.

Worse, our highway-centric transportation system creates numerous intersecting problems: it limits access to jobs, healthcare, and education for low-income residents, seniors, youth, disabled, and immigrant communities while harming adjacent neighborhoods through poor air quality, dangerous traffic, and noise that worsen health outcomes and nesecitate more healthcare spending. Overbuilt highways have stripped local tax bases from cities and counties, destroying homes, businesses, and main streets that once provided local economic and wealth-building opportunities and much-needed local and county revenue. 

As the backbone of our carbon-intensive transportation system, highways drive inefficient sprawl that electrification alone cannot fix, while our failure to invest in diverse transportation options keeps household expenses high for all Minnesotans. Across all of these harms, low-income and communities of color bear the highest burdens, and unsustainable costs, traffic safety woes, and limited transportation choices hurt all Minnesotans.


The roadmap to a people-centered transportation future

We must invest more in transit infrastructure and services, and in safe biking, walking, and rolling infrastructure, in all communities across Minnesota, regardless of age, ability or disability, geography, income, or race. We need to maintain our existing transportation system and stop expanding highways.

We need to advance projects to rightsize and turn back overbuilt roads and highways across Minnesota to meet transportation needs and free up land to support local tax bases, create new housing and commercial space, build parks and other amenities, and create other local benefits.

Our transportation system must consider environmental justice, health, climate, and economic impacts of major highway projects.

We need additional transparency and accountability measures to ensure MnDOT is democratically accountable, meaningfully engages Minnesotans, and listens to the needs of communities and local governments.

Highway maintenance costs us billions of dollars. Everyone benefits from diversifying the ways we get around. These projects can grow union job opportunities and maximize local benefits in building a transportation system for the future.

How do we achieve an equitable transportation future?

The way we invest in Minnesota Transportation is broken. It’s time to fix it.

~$300 Million

$3.5 billion

30-Year High

Previous Legislative Work

Check out past legislative accomplishments and progress in putting people first in transportation.