The next cycle of funding from the federal Bipartisan Infrastructure Law will provide more than $235 million for more than 150 local road and bridge projects in 66 counties across the state over the next four years.
“We’ve been working hard to improve more than 4,600 miles of highways and locally owned roads while making the long-term investments in our state’s infrastructure, and the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law is going to help ensure we can continue building on our work into the future,” says Gov. Tony Evers.
Since 2019, according to WisDOT, the state has improved more than 4,600 miles of highways and roads, including more than 1,700 miles of locally owned roads and nearly 1,500 bridges across the state.
“We are allocating this funding throughout Wisconsin to make quality investments and build a 21st century transportation system,” says WisDOT Secretary Craig Thompson. “We chose to put this BIL funding where it is most needed—in high-priority state and local highway and bridge projects. In collaboration with all levels of government, we are delivering reliable transportation infrastructure to benefit all users for years to come.”
The Surface Transportation Program allocates federal funds to complete a variety of improvements to federal-aid-eligible roadways in rural or urban areas. The Local Bridge Improvement Assistance Program distributes federal and state funds to help local governments rehabilitate and replace the most seriously deficient existing federal-aid-eligible local structures on Wisconsin’s local highway systems.
Earlier this year, WisDOT released funding allocations for federal fiscal year 2022, which runs from Oct. 1, 2021 through Sept. 30, 2022.
Below is the funding allocation by program for federal fiscal years 2023-26.
The funding will be distributed over the next four federal fiscal years, Oct. 1, 2022 through Sept. 30, 2026.
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