MTC Pledges $10 Million for New Affordable Housing Fund
Dateline:
02/26/2010Source:
PR Newswire Over the next several years, MTC hopes to parlay its $10 million pledge into a loan fund totaling $40 million or more by attracting matching commitments from private foundations and other investors. The new Bay Area Affordable Transit-Oriented Development Fund (TOD Fund) is to be modeled on similar funds established in recent years in Denver, Los Angeles, Minneapolis, New Orleans and New York, which in aggregate total more than $350 million and have been used to leverage hundreds of millions of additional dollars from commercial lenders, investment funds, foundations and public agencies to support affordable housing development. The Bay Area initiative, which is expected to begin making its first investments in 2011, is spearheaded by the Great Communities Collaborative, a coalition of nonprofits and community foundations whose 24 member organizations include the San Francisco Foundation, the Silicon Valley Community Foundation and the East Bay Community Foundation.
"In order to meet urgent and strict state goals for greenhouse gas emission reductions and sustainability, Bay Area regional planning agencies for land use, air quality and transportation face an imperative to reduce the number of cars
MTC's support for the Bay Area Affordable TOD Fund is subject to several conditions. Because the TOD Fund is not an eligible use of the federal money used to finance other Transportation for Livable Communities projects, the Commission must identify another source of funds and eligible projects for which it can exchange the federal dollars. MTC also requires that:
- Foundations and other TOD Fund participants match MTC's commitment on a minimum 3-to-1 basis by August 31, 2011 to reach a total of at least $40 million;
- Funds be spent only in areas already designated by the Commission as either a planned or potential Priority Development Area;
- Commission staff report to MTC's Planning Committee in September 2011 on fundraising and satisfaction of the other conditions before seeking the Commission's approval to release the exchanged dollars to the TOD Fund
Based on information provided by Bay Area cities and developers, MTC staff estimates a
$40 million TOD Fund could be used to help finance the acquisition of at least 20 to 30 acres around the region, which, depending on the density of build-out, would support development of anywhere from 1,100 to 3,800 units of affordable housing.
It may take a couple years before the land banking assistance results in new housing projects coming on line. "Once developers start tapping the TOD Fund to secure sites, they will still need to go through local agency approval processes and line up construction financing," Heminger cautioned.
MTC is the transportation planning, funding and coordinating agency for the nine-county San Francisco Bay Area. MTC created the Transportation for Livable Communities program in 1998 to fund small-scale, community and transit-oriented projects that improve neighborhood vitality.
SOURCE Metropolitan Transportation Commission
