Our community has said that congestion and neighborhood safety are community priorities, and helped the City design the list of projects that voters ultimately approved.

Dashboard

To keep things transparent and accountable, the Transportation Bond Oversight Committee created the dashboard below. It gives you easy access to the latest GO Bond project updates. Further, it is updated with financial information every quarter.

The Transportation Bond Oversight Committee monitors, tracks, and reports to the community on project expenses, schedule, progress, and benchmarks.

Active Projects

City Council, after a two-year process with the Citywide Transportation Advisory Committee, identified these bond-funded projects. They focused on helping people who drive, ride bikes, and walk. The projects align closely with what our community said was important. Key priorities include Reed Market Road, US 97/Parkway, 3rd Street, east-west connections, and better pedestrian and bicycle access to schools, parks, and jobs.

Funding

The bonds will be repaid through an annual assessment of real property. This is estimated to cost property owners an average of 47 cents per $1,000 of assessed value each year during the repayment period. For example, the owner of a home with a real market value of $415,000 and an assessed value of $220,000 (the citywide average) would pay about $170 per year based on amounts from FY20. The bonds are structured so that property taxes won't increase before 2022.

The City will issue bonds in multiple series over time to fund the proposed projects. The annual cost to property owners may be lower in the early years and higher later, once all the debt is issued. The City expects to issue the final bond series in 2030, with repayment completed by 2050.

Updates

 

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Frequently Asked Questions

How much will it cost taxpayers? (Who will pay?)
When will the tax increase go into effect?
Which projects will be funded?
How were the proposed projects identified?
Will a portion of the bond funds complement other funding sources, such as federal, state, or private?
When will the projects be constructed? Will the City be able to complete all of these projects?
Did Bend look at other transportation funding options?
What if the bond measure did not pass?
Will the bond funds help Bend provide for road maintenance? Could the bond funds provide for snow removal?
How are federal, state, and local taxes currently used?
How were funds used from the previous transportation bond measure?
How will bond funds be overseen?
Proposed Bond Projects