News

City unveils “Philadelphia Transit Plan” to fight climate change

SEPTA focuses on a carless future for a greener city

The City of Philadelphia and SEPTA unveiled the Philadelphia Transit Plan: A Vision for 2045 today.

The roadmap is the city’s plan to improve public transit, provide safe, equitable access, and fight climate change. Overall, the better the transit system that Philadelphia has, the less dependent that residents are on cars.

The report also focuses on the inequities of transit – residents of color spend an average of 12 minutes per day commuting to work than white residents, which adds up to 50 hours over the course of a year. Also, fewer cars on the road means more room for bike shares, outdoor dining, and green stormwater infrastructure.

It’s no secret that public transit reduces your carbon emissions. Taking the bus saves you 38% CO2 emissions, and electric rails are between 48 to 68^ over cars.

CO2 emissions by Philly Travel
as shown in Philadelphia Transit Plan

The Transit Plan’s environmental goals include:

  • Shift trips from driving to public transit, and make living without a car easier for Philadelphia residents.
  • Adopt battery-electric buses as the technology allows.
  • Shift toward clean energy to power our trains, buses, and trolleys.

Challenges to public transit

However, all of these goals still face hurdles. Congestion is burdensome to public transit and slow down buses, ridership has declined since 2013 (although the population has grown), and there’s concerns over safety and funding.

The city’s plan and the amount it can accomplish comes down to funding. The Transit Plan summary spells it out based off budget scenarios:

Want to find out more? The full report is almost 200 pages:


Photo:  Mayor Jim Kenney visiting City Hall SEPTA subway station last week, courtesy of the Mayor’s Office of Communications 

Broke in Philly is a collaborative reporting project on solutions to poverty and the city’s push toward economic justice. Green Philly is one of more than 20 news organizations in the collective. Follow us on Twitter @BrokeInPhilly.
Julie Hancher

Julie Hancher is Editor-in-Chief of Green Philly, sharing her expertise of all things sustainable in the city of brotherly love. She enjoys long walks in the park with local beer and greening her travels, cooking & cat, Sir Floofus Drake.

Recent Posts

BREAKING: Circle Compost merging with Bennett Compost

Philadelphia's two private composting services are now combined into one. Circle Compost and Bennett Compost…

5 days ago

City planning survey, bird songs as art, & more

Catch up on the latest sustainability news: Philadelphia Planning Commission launches survey to hear from…

6 days ago

The low-waste holiday gift guide for everyone on your Philly list

Running out of ideas for everyone from your brother to Gritty? Here's a list of…

1 week ago

City solar agreement, new pocket park, & more

Catch up on the latest sustainability news: Philadelphia Water Department releases service line records. PWD…

2 weeks ago

PA pollutes more than some countries. Without RGGI, frontline communities face the worse impacts.

In an attempt to reach a new state budget, Pennsylvania has been pulled from RGGI,…

2 weeks ago

Thanksgiving trash schedule, water bill relief, & more

Check out the latest sustainability news: Holiday trash and recycling collection schedule. In observance of…

3 weeks ago