Congress takes a stand for neighborhoods with transit
Have you ever caught a bus right outside your office? Taken the subway to a ball game? Or ridden the light rail to go to the grocery store?
If you have, you know how convenient and inviting transit-oriented development can be.
This strategy—of building neighborhoods with homes, shops and offices near public transportation—can create significant economic development, generate new tax revenue for towns and cities, and lower housing and transportation costs for families. But these projects come with complex infrastructure challenges, and as a result need more than just bank support.
A new bill introduced today in Congress would help make transit-oriented development projects more financially feasible.