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Bikes, buses, and bottles: How Cambridge residents chose to spend $600,000

A banner outside Cambridge City Hall promoted Participatory Budgeting in August. Eric Levenson / Boston.com

Transportation and bike safety were at the center of Cambridge residents’ minds when they voted on how to divvy up $600,000 in funding last week.

The city of Cambridge on Thursday announced the results of its Participatory Budgeting program, in which residents voted from Dec. 5 to 12 on how to spend public funds. From a list of 23 pre-approved options, residents chose to fund a total of seven programs.

Three approved options dealt with increased safety for bikers, as residents chose to move bike lanes to between street parking and the sidewalk ($50,000), paint green bike lanes through intersections ($40,000), and add lane markings and signs along Massachusetts Avenue ($70,000).

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Residents also voted to speed up the MBTA’s No. 1 bus line, which runs along Massachusetts Avenue, by equipping it with a Transit Signal Priority system that would allow buses to extend green lights ($250,000).

In addition, residents chose to create a food rescue freezer to feed the hungry ($48,000), to build five water bottle refill stations ($40,000), and to purchase new chairs for area schools ($102,000).

Cambridge said 4,184 residents voted on how to spend the money as part of a program called Participatory Budgeting, a 53 percent increase over last year. The city received a total of 540 project ideas, and a volunteer group then pared those down to 23 options and their expected costs.

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This was Cambridge’s second foray into the Participatory Budgeting program, which The New York Times has called “revolutionary civics in action.’’ Last year, residents voted on what to do with $528,000, most of which went to a $320,000 public toilet in Central Square.

Gallery: Photos of old cars and traffic jams in Boston

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