Welcome to the San Francisco County Transportation Authority

Created in 1989, the Transportation Authority is responsible for long-range transportation planning for the city, and it analyzes, designs and funds improvements for San Francisco's roadway and public transportation networks. The Transportation Authority administers and oversees the delivery of the Prop K half-cent local transportation sales tax program. It also serves as the designated Congestion Management Agency (CMA) for San Francisco under state law, and acts as the San Francisco Program Manager for grants from the Transportation Fund for Clean Air (TFCA). The Transportation Authority was designated Treasure Island Mobility Management Agency (TIMMA) in 2014, charged with planning for sustainable mobility on Treasure Island, coordinating new ferry and regional bus service, on-island shuttle, bike share, and car share opportunities. Read more

See the Quick Links to our projects and studies at the bottom of this page.

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The Transportation Authority works with San Francisco residents, transit providers and other government agencies to plan, fund and deliver critical transportation projects and programs citywide. Check the video to see what we're all about.  

TRANSPORTATION AUTHORITY BOARD APPROVES ENVIRONMENTAL REPORT, SELECTS DESIGN

Geary BRT visualization

The San Francisco County Transportation Authority Board—comprised of members of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors—unanimously approved the Geary Bus Rapid Transit Project design and the Final Environmental Impact Report (EIR) at their meeting on Thursday, January 5, 2017.

The ultimate project design approved by the Transportation Authority reflected significant public input and culminated more than eight years of outreach by the project team to residents, community leaders, advocates and merchants from the Outer Richmond to Downtown.

Community feedback throughout the outreach process, which included over 260 stakeholder meetings, resulted in:

  • Preserving a local bus stop at Collins Street and Rapid stop at Laguna Street;
  • Retaining the pedestrian bridge at Webster Street;
  • Preserving merchant parking in the Richmond District, including at Spruce Street, where all existing parking and loading will be maintained with a local-only bus stop; and
  • Adding more safety improvements to intersections with high collision rates for pedestrians and cyclists.

To learn more about the project, milestones or Final Environmental Impact Report, visit GearyBRT.org.

REQUEST FOR QUALIFICATIONS to Provide On-Call Project Management Oversight and General Engineering Consultant Service

The San Francisco County Transportation Authority is inviting Statements of Qualifications (SOQ) to this Request for Qualifications (RFQ 16/17-03) from interested firms to provide on-call project management oversight and general engineering consultant services. The SOQ must respond to the scope of services described in Section III of the RFP.

READ MORE

New Westbound I-80 Yerba Buena Island Ramps Opened Saturday, October 22, 2016

I-80 YBI East-side ramps in serviceOn Saturday, October 22, 2016, the San Francisco County Transportation Authority (SFCTA), in coordination with the California Department of Transportation (Caltrans) and Treasure Island Development Authority (TIDA), opened the new westbound I-80 on- and off-ramps that connect Yerba Buena Island (YBI) and Treasure Island (TI) to the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge.

The new westbound on- and off-ramps are in different locations than the current westbound ramp which means that motorists will need to make adjustments.

For complete details regarding this change in traffic conditions please view this public information announcement:

English  |  Spanish (Español)  |  Chinese (中文)

View maps of the current/future YBI on- and off-ramps:

READ MORE

NEW TEST PROGRAM REWARDS BART RIDERS FOR TRAVELLING OUTSIDE THE MORNING RUSH

Riders boarding a BART trainBART Perks is a six-month test program being offered by BART and the San Francisco County Transportation Authority to explore new ways to reduce crowding.

Riders earn points for every trip on BART. Those points can be exchanged for small cash rewards or used to play a Spin to Win game for the chance to pick up additional points or random cash rewards from $1 to $100.

Sign up or learn more at the BART Perks website.

This program complements BART’s long-term efforts to reduce crowding and congestion on trains and in stations including upgrading train controls and other major system infrastructure, adding more trains to the fleet, and running trains closer together.

The program is funded primarily through a grant from the Federal Highway Administration, and the program design is based on successful implementation of similar programs around the world. READ MORE

Photo by Steve Rhodes via Flickr Commons.

ALEMANY INTERCHANGE STUDY EXPLORES SAFETY IMPROVEMENTS

Alemany interchange aerial photoThe Alemany Interchange—where U.S. 101, I-280, Alemany Boulevard, Bayshore Boulevard, San Bruno Avenue and local streets intersect—presents challenges to pedestrian and bicycle safety.

At Commissioner David Campos' request, the Transportation Authority is working with neighboring communities, led by the Portola Neighborhood Association, to make the area safer and more accessible to all travelers.

Transportation Authority staff are coordinating with SFMTA planners and engineers and Caltrans staff to develop potential circulation and safety enhancement projects for the area. Community outreach is also underway to obtain input on the various improvement options.

The Alemany Interchange Improvement Study is just one of several efforts under the Transportation Authority’s Neighborhood Transportation Improvement Program (NTIP), which funds neighborhood transportation planning efforts and capital projects in every district in San Francisco. The program was developed through the Transportation Authority’s 2013 Countywide Transportation Plan to strengthen the pipeline of projects at the neighborhood level, particularly in underserved areas and Communities of Concern.

See where else NTIP work is taking place across San Francisco and let us know your ideas for the next update of the San Francisco Transportation Plan, now underway.

NEW TA STUDY HIGHLIGHTS BETTER, FASTER WEST SIDE TRANSIT ACCESS

Balboa Park BART station platformIn collaboration with transit riders and residents, the Transportation Authority has issued a study aimed at creating better, faster transit connections throughout the city’s west side neighborhoods.

The Strategic Analysis Report on West Side Transit Access, initiated by Commissioner Katy Tang, explores several options to make transit more competitive with driving and to improve access to local and regional transit hubs such as Daly City and West Portal.

Download the report from the Strategic Analysis Reports website.

Among the options highlighted include exploring a rapid service for Muni’s 29-Sunset line; modifying underutilized bus routes, such as the 66-Quintara, piloting methods to encourage carpooling and ridesharing to hubs and providing secure bicycle parking and reducing conflicts at West Portal Station.

Key study recommendations already moving forward include Commissioner Tang’s request for Neighborhood Transportation Improvement Program (NTIP) planning funds for Muni to conduct service planning on the 66-Quintara and the programming of Prop AA vehicle registration funds to create more space at the Daly City BART station to accommodate planned local bus service increases including for the 14R-Mission.

The study area encompasses the area south of Golden Gate Park and north of the city line and includes the Sunset, Parkside, West Portal and Golden Gate Heights neighborhoods as well as the areas around Stonestown Mall, Lake Merced and San Francisco State University.

Photo: James_A_Castañeda via Flickr Commons

NEIGHBORHOOD TRANSPORTATION IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM (NTIP)

School kids cross Church Street in the rainNTIP logo

The Neighborhood Transportation Improvement Program (NTIP) funds community-based neighborhood-scale planning efforts, especially in underserved neighborhoods and areas with vulnerable populations (e.g. seniors, children, and/or people with disabilities).

The NTIP was developed in response to mobility and equity analysis findings from the San Francisco Transportation Plan (SFTP), the city’s 30-year blueprint guiding transportation investment in San Francisco, and the Transportation Authority Board's desire for more focus on neighborhoods, especially on Communities of Concern and other underserved neighborhoods.

The SFTP found that walking, biking and transit reliability initiatives are important ways to address socio-economic and geographic inequities.

The NTIP is made possible by the Transportation Authority through grants from San Francisco's half-cent sales tax for transportation.

Current NTIP Projects

For more information on the NTIP program see our NTIP pages. For information on individual projects, see below. READ MORE

District 1. Improving Connections from Golden Gate Park to the Presido
District 1. Arguello Boulevard Near-Term Improvements
District 2. Lombard Study: Managing Access to the "Crooked Street"
District 2. Lombard Street/US-101 Corridor Pedestrian Safety
District 3. Kearny Street Multimodal Implementation
District 4. 66-Quintara Reconfiguration Study
District 5. Western Addition Community-Based Transportation Plan
District 6. Golden Gate Avenue Buffered Bike Lane

Photo courtesy Lynn Friedman via flickr Commons.

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District 6. Bessie Carmichael Crosswalk
District 6. South Park Traffic Calming
District 6. Vision Zero Ramp Intersection Study
District 6. Folsom-Howard Streetscape Project
District 7. Balboa Area Transportation Demand Management Study
District 9. Alemany Interchange Improvement Study
District 10. Cesar Chavez/ Bayshore/Potrero Intersection Improvement Project
District 10. Potrero Hill Pedestrian Safety and Transit Access
District 11. Geneva-San Jose Intersection Study

MyStreetSF Projects Map

MyStreetSF Projects Map logoMyStreetSF Projects Map thumbnailFrom signals to streetcars, bicycles to boulevards, from pedestrian safety to paving, the Transportation Authority provides funding for hundreds of transportation projects citywide. The MyStreetSF interactive map shows projects currently underway, proposed, and recently completed that are funded by, or prioritized for funding by the Transportation Authority, as well as those for which the we provide some level of oversight, in our role as Congestion Management Agency for San Francisco. The MyStreetSF interactive map allows you to search for projects by location, Supervisorial District, project type (e.g., bicycle, pedestrian safety, transit rehabilitation), project sponsor, or timeline. Click on a project on the map to see key information (e.g., short description, schedule, cost) and a link to the project page and/or project sponsor’s main page. The map page also includes information on city-wide projects and programs like Bicycle Education and Outreach. READ MORE

Join our Citizens Advisory Committees!

Citizens (or Community) Advisory Committees, also known as CACs, are an important part of our planning efforts: they give the public—community and business stakeholders—a voice in the direction and scope of many of our projects, analyze benefits and impacts on San Francisco’s many communities, and recommend courses of action.

We currently have one vacancy on our agency-wide CAC. If you’re interested, get in touch with us! Call 415.522.4800 or send us an email. We need your guidance and support!

SFCTA Newsletters

Get on the email list for one (or more) of our project newsletters, for notifications about upcoming funding or business opportunities, or vacancies on one of our Citizens Advisory Committees. Subscribe now.

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