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New report lists TOD funding programs

Report released by Reconnecting America provides information on 41 programs, including 17 state-level, 15 regional and transit agency, and nine local programs

January 4, 2011
3 min to read


On Tuesday, National nonprofit group Reconnecting America released a new report on programs that provide funding for transit oriented development (TOD) projects.

"There are so many innovative programs in the U.S. that provide grants, loans, tax credits or direct financial incentives to TOD plans or projects," said Sarah Kline, Reconnecting America's policy director. "This report can be used as a resource by planners and policy-makers who are creating new TOD programs in their own jurisdiction and who will benefit from learning the essential facts about other programs that operate at similar scales and contexts."

The scope of this effort was not to compile all policies that support TOD, such as zoning codes, joint development policies or authorizing legislation, but rather to inventory ongoing, institutionalized programs that provide direct funding or financial incentives. The report provides information on 41 programs, including 17 state-level, 15 regional and transit agencies, and nine local programs, according to a statement released by the nonprofit group.

 "I applaud Reconnecting America's policy team for putting together this document," said Reconnecting America's President/CEO John Robert Smith. "We recognize that these programs change frequently and there will never be a 'final' compilation of TOD programs, but this snapshot should give readers a helpful understanding of the types of policies that exist."

Programs that provide grants, loans, tax credits, or direct financial incentives to TOD projects or plans have been sorted into three categories:

Planning - Funds to conduct corridor, district or station-area TOD planning.

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Implementation - Funds for construction of projects or infrastructure in a TOD district.

Property Acquisition - Funds dedicated to acquiring property or land banking in locations near transit.

The report, "2010 Inventory of TOD Programs: A National Review of State, Regional and Local Programs that Fund Transit-Oriented Development Plans and Projects," includes three recommendations regarding TOD funding programs.

  1. TOD programs must be tailored to fit the local conditions and needs of the place they are designed to serve.

  2. TOD-supportive programs are important, but they are just one piece of the puzzle when it comes to implementing TOD. In addition, removing policy barriers to TOD may prove equally important.

  3. TOD programs may be able to include an incentive for localities to zone for appropriate levels of affordable housing near transit, for agencies to acquire properties for mixed-income TOD, or for developers to include below-market rate units in their projects. 

Reconnecting America's report displays the notable variety that exists in TOD programs across the U.S. today. This variety is largely due to the different political landscape, challenges, strengths, development market and key players that exist in each state, region or locality.

Recognizing that TOD programs change and are adopted frequently, Reconnecting America aims to use the content from this report to develop an interactive web tool that will include a broader set of policies and can be updated by users, to ensure ongoing accuracy. 

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