U.S. Transportation Secretary LaHood Announces $29 Million to Help Veterans and Military Families Connect to Jobs and More by Tapping Local Transportation

Press Release

Date: July 2, 2012
Location: Washington, DC

U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood today announced $29 million in grants to provide improved access to local transportation for veterans and their families, wounded warriors and other military personnel, helping them find affordable rides to work, school, shopping, medical care and other destinations in their communities. The grants will support 64 projects in 33 states and the Northern Mariana Islands.

"Ensuring that our veterans and military families have access to quality, convenient transportation is just one way we can thank them for their service," said Secretary LaHood. "With these transportation grants, we will help connect veterans and military families with the jobs and training opportunities they deserve, as well as the medical care and other services they need, all located close to home."

The Veterans Transportation and Community Living Initiative, funded and managed by the Federal Transit Administration (FTA), supports efforts by local governments and transit agencies to implement technologies--ranging from "smart phone" applications to real-time transit bus locator information--that make it easier for veterans and others to access and schedule rides on available buses, vans, taxis and other transportation systems. The unemployment rate for Iraq and Afghanistan veterans is more than 12 percent, more than four percentage points above the national average.

"America's war heroes deserve a chance to support their families, participate in their communities, receive job training and get to work," said FTA Administrator Peter Rogoff, who was in Lee County, Florida, for the announcement. "It's vitally important that we remove barriers to success by making transportation available wherever our veterans choose to live, work and receive care."

Projects receiving grants today include:

* Lee County, Florida, which is receiving a $1.4 million grant that will, among other things, enable the installation of new information kiosks at a brand new Veterans Administration outpatient clinic in Cape Coral and other locations, where veterans can readily obtain real-time information on transit rides and schedules, day or night.

* The Greater Dayton Regional Transit Authority in Dayton, Ohio, which is home to the Wright-Patterson Air Force Base and more than 80,000 veterans. The $450,000 grant announced today will make it easier for returning and retired veterans and those who have disabilities to arrange for rides by phone, smart phone or on the web.

FTA received 81 eligible proposals requesting $41 million for this second round of the Veterans Transportation and Community Living Initiative grants, reflecting strong demand for the program. In FY2011, FTA awarded $34.6 million for 55 veterans' transportation projects around the country.

The Obama Administration has committed roughly a $1 billion a year in discretionary resources to help communities around the nation build and expand light rail, commuter rail, bus rapid transit, and other forms of public transportation to connect American families, including our nation's returning veterans, with jobs, education, medical care and other vital services.

The Veterans Transportation and Community Living Initiative was developed by the Federal Interagency Coordinating Council on Access and Mobility, a permanent partnership of federal departments working together to better coordinate federal programs on behalf of people with disabilities, older adults and individuals with lower incomes. The Council is chaired by Secretary LaHood.

For more information on the individual grants go to http://www.fta.dot.gov/grants/13094_13528.html


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