Ride-on-demand services
For many awardees this will be a first-of-its-kind mobility project to be funded and launched in their community. Funding for CMO is made possible by California Climate Investments, a statewide initiative that puts billions of cap-and-trade dollars to work reducing greenhouse gas emissions, strengthening the economy, and improving public health. The response to the mobility project voucher application window shows there is strong demand and need for this funding. Twenty-one communities received funds in its inaugural year, however there were a total of 33 applicants requesting as much as $1 million each.
“These funds directly support disadvantaged communities and communities of color from across the state, creating safe, clean, affordable and accessible options for getting residents where they need to go,” California Air Resources Board Executive Officer Richard W. Corey said. “The Clean Mobility Options Program was designed to ensure that each project
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Chula Vista and National City each have been awarded nearly $1 million to help jumpstart their transportation pilot programs that aim to improve mobility for its residents while also reducing greenhouse gas emissions.
The California Air Resources Board last week announced that 21 cities, Native American tribal governments, nonprofits and transit agencies in underserved communities were granted up to $1 million each under the inaugural Clean Mobility Options Voucher program to launch zero-emission mobility projects.
“These funds directly support disadvantaged communities and communities of color from across the state, creating safe, clean, affordable and accessible options for getting residents where they need to go,” Richard W. Corey, the board’s executive officer, said in a prepared statement. “The Clean Mobility Options Program was designed to ensure that each project is developed both by and for that community to address its own unique transportation issues taki