During the presidential campaign, Barack Obama promised to "ensure that more Metropolitan Planning Organizations create policies to incentivize greater bicycle and pedestrian usage of roads and sidewalks." We can't find anything that his administration has done specifically to work with Metropolitan Planning Organizations, but top officials have done a couple of things to advance the cause of cyclists and pedestrians.
First, three federal agencies — the Transportation Department, the Department of Housing and Urban Development and the Environmental Protection Agency — have begun working jointly toward creating what the administration has termed "more livable communities." These are communities that minimize traffic congestion and commuting times, which provide transportation options beyond the automobile, which keep housing and transportation costs low for residents, and which make the most efficient and cleanest use of land and other natural resources. (More on this project here .)
At the opening plenary session of the 2009 Bike Summit on March, 16, 2009, Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood told attendees that DOT will be "a full partner in working toward livable communities." Kevin Mills, vice president of policy for the Rails to Trails Conservancy, said in an interview that LaHood is "saying all the right things in all the right places."
Most concretely, bike and pedestrian projects receive specific encouragement in Transportation Investment Generating Economic Recovery, or TIGER, grants, which were included in the economic stimulus bill passed earlier this year.
These grants will make $1.5 billion available through Sept. 30, 2011, for transportation projects. They are to be awarded on a competitive basis for projects that are deemed to have "a significant impact on the nation, a metropolitan area or a region." Among those eligible for the grants are state and local governments, transit agencies, port authorities and metropolitan planning organizations.
TIGER grants haven't built any bike paths or pedestrian trails yet, and other such projects will likely need to wait until the next major transportation reauthorization bill is passed — something considered unlikely to happen until next year.
Still, TIGER grants could eventually make bike and pedestrian projects a reality. This, combined with LaHood's rhetorical support for biking and walking, leads us to rate this promise In the Works.