Funding for roads and runways, bridges and trains. And possibly securing driver’s licenses online and stiffer penalties for speeding. You’ll find that in the House Transportation Finance and Policy Committee’s budget bill.
Seven separate funds would receive a total of $5.38 billion in transportation appropriations in fiscal year 2026 and another $4.49 billion in fiscal year 2027 under a delete-all amendment to HF2438 reviewed by the committee Thursday.
Committee action is expected Friday morning, with the bill likely getting sent to the House Ways and Means Committee.
"This is not an easy process. We're in a unique situation with a balanced House, but we have a bill that has a lot for stakeholders in the transportation world," said Rep. Jon Koznick (R-Lakeville), who co-chairs the committee with Rep. Erin Koegel (DFL-Spring Lake Park).
Policy
Among the policy items in the amendment are:
Appropriations and revenue
Direct appropriations for fiscal year 2026 would include $4.85 billion for the Department of Transportation, $297.07 million for the Department of Public Safety, and $124.96 million for the Metropolitan Council.
Department of Transportation funding would include: $3.26 billion for state roads, $1.4 billion for local roads, $134 million for agency management, and $63 million for multimodal systems.
[MORE: View the spreadsheet]
Unlike most omnibus finance bills, the one dealing with transportation also has a revenue component involved, in that there are specific taxes that earmark their proceeds for transportation projects. Projected revenues for fiscal year 2026 total $1.07 billion, $1.05 billion of it from the Trunk Highway Fund.
So, while transportation showed up on the House Budget Resolution as having a General Fund target of zero, the committee is entrusted with making recommendations on how several funds should be disbursed, including the Trunk Highway Fund, County State-Aid Highway Fund, Municipal State-Aid Street Fund, State Airports Fund, and Highway User Tax Distribution Fund.
Some of the bill’s biggest ticket items for fiscal year 2026 funding include:
— Session Daily writer Margaret Stevens contributed to this story.