The Michigan legislature is giving serious attention to Rapid Transit, not only as a transportation alternative but as a strategy for urban renewal. In the state that once was synonymous with the automobile, that’s a big deal. Argues Keith Schneider with the Michigan Land Use Institute:
Since 1981, when San Diego built the new light rail line that started its remarkable downtown resurgence, 39 cities have opened new street car, light rail, and commuter rail systems in the United States. Each time, jobs, housing, businesses, and economic opportunity blossomed along their routes.
In Virginia, the solution to financing light rail may be Community Development Authorities (CDAs) and Tax Increment Financing. A CDA would encompass the property around a proposed transit stop. The authority would issue bonds, which would defray the cost of building the rail line, erecting the station, if any, and making other improvements within the authority boundaries. The bonds would be repaid by added taxes levied on the property owners covered by the authority. Presumably, landowners would be willing to pay the taxes because the transit and other improvements would increase the value of their property.
A string of CDAs could be constructed along the light rail route, raising large sums for the project – conceivably enough, when combined with fares and federal funds, to pay for all ofit.

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