Let's Get Greeley on the Go! Help Develop Mobility Options in Our City.

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Regardless of your preference for how you move in and around Greeley, the city wants to make investments in your future. A future that includes a safe and efficient system that supports wellbeing, health, welfare, comfort, and happiness — and connects you to where you need to be.

Project Objectives

As our community grows and changes over time, the way we move and get around is evolving, too. This new direction for mobility services aims to develop a complete mobility network that:

  • Improves connection points and transportation choices to destinations such as grocery stores, parks, downtown and other popular places within Greeley.
  • Encourages you to use transit, carpooling, micromobility and other forms of travel as an alternative to driving on your own.
  • Improves air quality and reduces greenhouse gas emissions.
  • Increases mobility choices like transit, carpooling and bicycling for longer distance travel.
  • Provides more frequent and efficient transit service in the region.

How You Can Help

Thank you for sharing feedback about our draft Mobility Development Plan! We’re grateful for the interest in route times, better bus access, airport connections, and more. City staff are incorporating this feedback into our final plan. Stay tuned for additional updates this spring!


Regardless of your preference for how you move in and around Greeley, the city wants to make investments in your future. A future that includes a safe and efficient system that supports wellbeing, health, welfare, comfort, and happiness — and connects you to where you need to be.

Project Objectives

As our community grows and changes over time, the way we move and get around is evolving, too. This new direction for mobility services aims to develop a complete mobility network that:

  • Improves connection points and transportation choices to destinations such as grocery stores, parks, downtown and other popular places within Greeley.
  • Encourages you to use transit, carpooling, micromobility and other forms of travel as an alternative to driving on your own.
  • Improves air quality and reduces greenhouse gas emissions.
  • Increases mobility choices like transit, carpooling and bicycling for longer distance travel.
  • Provides more frequent and efficient transit service in the region.

How You Can Help

Thank you for sharing feedback about our draft Mobility Development Plan! We’re grateful for the interest in route times, better bus access, airport connections, and more. City staff are incorporating this feedback into our final plan. Stay tuned for additional updates this spring!


  • Draft Plan Feedback and Next Steps

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    Thank you for sharing feedback about our draft Mobility Development Plan! We’re grateful for the interest in route times, better bus access, airport connections, and more. We also hear that you're interested in how this plan impacts traffic signals, road improvements and congestion.

    The mobility plan’s primary focus is on transit and mobility options. There are several other major projects that address safety, congestion, and road improvements around Greeley. Some underway include:

    • Keep Greeley Moving: The City of Greeley maintains more than 850 lane miles of roadway and 700 miles of curb, gutter and sidewalk in Greeley. Since the KGM program began in 2016, the City of Greeley has improved over 800 lane miles of roadways – and there’s more work to do!

    • MERGE: With the passing of ballot issue 2M, combined with over $50 million in federal grants, we can move forward with new U.S. 34 interchanges at 35th and 47th Avenues. MERGE will also fund a mobility hub at Centerplace. Currently, the project is in its design phase; we expect construction to kick off in 2026.

    • The "Vision Zero" Safety Action Plan: In January, the Greeley City Council adopted a Vision Zero resolution. It aims to end traffic deaths and serious injuries on city streets by 2045. In 2025, we’ll kickstart the plan with “quick build” projects using a $9.9 million grant from the U.S. Department of Transportation.

    • Updated Corridors: We're working to redesign and improve important transportation corridors across Greeley. These projects are in various phases of development. Examples include 16th Street Enhancements, the 9th and 10th Corridor, the intersection of 23rd Avenue and 4th/5th Streets, and more.

    • Traffic Signal Timing: Staff regularly review and, when needed, adjust the timings of our 120+ traffic signals. Right now, we're working on many improvements. We're auditing and adjusting individual high-traffic corridors, replacing old signal technology along 10th Street, and piloting an AI-enhanced signal technology at some intersections.

    Our strategy for mobility involves moving beyond traditional transit. We want to offer road users an umbrella of services that provides users with seamless access to a variety of interconnected options.

    The Mobility Development plan is just one part of our current transportation master plan, Greeley on the Go. The Greeley on the Go plan can be found here. This plan outlines the long-term needs for increasing safety for all road users, decreasing congestion, adding to our transportation choices, as well as the priority focus areas across Greeley that need the most urgent improvements.

    We're incorporating community feedback into our final version of the plan. Stay tuned for updates soon!



    Please note, data for this plan has been pulled from the Housing and Transportation Affordability Index: htaindex.cnt.org.

  • Review the Draft Plan

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    CLOSED: This discussion has concluded.

    We have spent the last year talking with people around Greeley, identifying potential solutions to mobility problems, and developing a draft of our city's mobility development plan. Before we finish it, we want to be sure it reflects the values and needs of everyone who lives, works, visits and plays here. That means you!

    Click here to download and read the draft plan. We're collecting community feedback from February 10 through March 3 under the "Share Plan Feedback" tab of this page.


    Graphic that reads, "Shape the Future, Share Perspectives, Be Represented."



  • Review the Mobility Scenarios and Take Our Survey

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    CLOSED: This discussion has concluded.

    The Greeley-Evans Transit (GET) system plays a critical role in helping community members get to where they need to go. However, as Greeley and surrounding communities continue to grow, our transportation systems need to grow alongside them.

    We encourage you to look through the near- and long-term scenarios and then take our survey to let us know which elements should be prioritized!

    Hotspot Map

    The two scenarios presented on the map were developed in collaboration with GET and Greeley staff, using the Mobility Umbrella developed as a part of the Greeley on the Go transportation plan, community feedback, and current route effectiveness to create near- and long-term scenarios for mobility in the City of Greeley.

    Near-Term Scenario: Shows a modified network focused on near-term bus routing improvements, enhanced service frequency, and additional microtransit options.

    Long-Term Scenario: Shows a completely updated network focused on enhanced transit service corridors, improved micromobility options, and microtransit zones across the city.

  • Greeley Receives $3.5 Million in Funding for Five New Regional Buses

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    The City of Greeley will receive $3,508,404 from the Federal Transit Administration to buy five compressed natural gas (CNG) buses for use on a new bus route between Greeley and Loveland. Funding for the transit investment comes from President Biden’s Bipartisan Infrastructure Law.

    The new buses will be used to facilitate limited-stop, regional service between Greeley and Loveland. Key stops along the U.S. 34 route will include connections to the University of Northern Colorado, the I-25 mobility hub at Centerra, as well as the City of Greeley’s future Mobility Expansion for Regional Growth and Equity (MERGE) mobility hub. This service, with the support of a Congestion Mitigation and Air Quality Improvement (CMAQ) grant, is slated to start in 2026.

    Read the complete news release here.

  • Zero Fare for Better Air!

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    CLOSED: This discussion has concluded.

    GET Transit will offer zero fares on all trips from July 1 through August 31.

    This year, GET is once again participating in the Colorado Zero Fare for Better Air Campaign. Fares are free on all services July 1-August 31, 2024. This includes Poudre Express, Paratransit and UCHealth Call N Ride services.

    GET offers zero fares across its system as part of the Zero Fare for Better Air initiative. This collaborative, statewide initiative, made possible by Colorado Senate Bill 22-180, in partnership with the Colorado Energy Office, is designed to reduce ground level ozone by increasing use of public transit.

    We hope you take advantage of the Zero Fare initiative this summer to try transit to get to work, school, a doctor’s appointment, or a weekend exploring Colorado. Plan your route today.

  • Possible Mobility Scenarios to Come

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    CLOSED: This discussion has concluded.

    Thank you to everyone in the community who shared feedback in our stakeholder meetings, across social media, and on our online mobility map. The City of Greeley team is now using this input to craft potential mobility scenarios for the future of our community. We anticipate sharing our ideas for another round of community feedback later this summer. Stay tuned!

  • Drop a Pin on the Greeley Mobility Map

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    CLOSED: This discussion has concluded.
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    Whether you walk, bike, scoot, wheel or take transit, we want to know about your experiences.

    Visit the Greeley mobility map and drop pins to share what works well, where you've experienced challenges and ideas for future improvement to the transportation system.

  • Greeley Tribune: 'It's All About Connecting'

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    In "A glimpse at the near future of getting around Greeley," the Greeley Tribune and Public Works Director Paul Trombino discuss the city's upcoming transportation projects planned to address the growth, specifically focusing on keeping the connection between different areas of the city.

    Read the complete story here.

  • Play the Mobility Services Council Presentation

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    During the April 9 City Council Work Session, Public Works staff delivered a mobility services update, which provides helpful updates about our already in-progress plans for mobility in Greeley.

    To learn more about what's in the works, play the presentation on the city's Civic Clerk portal. (The presentation begins at the 5:19 mark.)

Page last updated: 07 Mar 2025, 02:02 PM