WORK PROGRAM
MBTA Sources of Community Value
May 4, 2023
The Boston Region Metropolitan Planning Organization (MPO) votes to approve this work program.
Agency and Other Client Transportation Planning Studies and Technical Analyses
Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority
Client Supervisor: Elizabeth Winters Ronaldson
Principal: Rebecca Morgan
Manager: Paul Christner
MassDOT-Directed PL Funds
Schedule and budget details are shown in Exhibits 1 and 2, respectively. This project is scheduled to be started in federal fiscal year (FFY) 2023 and completed in FFY 2024.
The overhead rate used to calculate the budget is subject to change every July 1st based on the approved projected overhead rate for the state fiscal year.
This studyis supported in full with non-MPO funding. Committing MPO staff to this project will not impinge on the quality or timeliness of MPO-funded work.
New and sustainable sources of funding to support the MBTA’s operating and capital needs are vital to ensure that the MBTA can safely, sustainably, and equitably serve the transportation needs of the Commonwealth. Since March 2020, the MBTA has relied on one-time federal funding to cover its operating deficit and fund vital capital projects. As the Commonwealth emerges from the COVID-19 pandemic and farebox revenue has not returned to pre-pandemic levels, the revenue composition that supports the MBTA must evolve. Potential new revenues could come from updates to existing sources or from new sources, such as congestion charges, Transit Tax Increment Financing, or new taxing authority.1
Across eastern Massachusetts, real estate values, development opportunities, and municipal revenues are at an all-time high. The MBTA is a large driver of increased value near its facilities, but the financial benefits derived from this value are limited by current local assessment approaches. To ensure the MBTA can continue to provide safe, sustainable, and equitable transportation services, it is important to explore mechanisms that increase the financial benefits that the MBTA can derive from the value it generates.
Furthermore, there is a need to establish more consistent frameworks for mitigating the impact of real estate development on transportation infrastructure as the current approach to developer mitigation is inconsistent from municipality to municipality and project to project. Achieving a more consistent framework would allow the MBTA to promote more transit-oriented development in the region, which will support the long-term financial sustainability of the region’s transit system. This work can help inform state leadership about the variety of potential funding mechanisms to support transit service.
Central Transportation Planning Staff (CTPS) will document and evaluate options for the Commonwealth to consider, including estimates of the revenue and other value that could accrue to the MBTA were any of these options to be implemented. This study will build on previous work by the MBTA, which focused on best practices globally for funding models and sources of operating and capital funding. CTPS will identify, quantify, and propose mechanisms to accrue incremental sources of value and revenue for the MBTA outside of the existing developer mitigation framework. The results of the study would inform state leadership about funding options to support transit.
CTPS will review the regional financial context in Massachusetts and assess advantages, drawbacks, and potential revenue impacts of various financial policies.
CTPS will review previous studies and related work and summarize findings to establish the baseline for this work. Previous work includes a review of funding practices in peer agencies and scopes of work for a related developer mitigation study underway now through MassDOT’s State Planning and Research Program.2 CTPS will classify revenue sources by type, including those that currently fund the MBTA, those that currently exist in Massachusetts but do not fund the MBTA, those that do not currently exist in Massachusetts, and other categories as needed.
Summaries of previous work
Based on the findings of Task 1, CTPS will assess the feasibility of modifying existing revenue streams and/or implementing new revenue streams to support the MBTA. CTPS will evaluate each potential revenue source by estimating a range of potential revenue that could accrue annually to the MBTA, predicting other benefits to the MBTA such as reduced operating costs or customer benefits, and documenting lessons learned from other jurisdictions. In consultation with the MBTA, CTPS will evaluate as many revenue streams as the schedule allows.
Estimates of revenues and other value from each potential source of revenue
CTPS will document its findings and assess new funding streams. CTPS's assessment will consider political feasibility; technical and operational complexity of implementation and management; annual size of the revenue that might accrue to the MBTA; and impacts to livability, equity, competitiveness, and any other factors identified in Task 1.
A technical memorandum describing the findings of tasks 1 and 2
Task |
Month | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | |
1.
Review Previous Work
|
From Month 1, Week 1 to Month 1, Week 4.
|
||||||
2.
Evaluate Massachusetts Context for Sources of Revenue
|
From Month 2, Week 1 to Month 5, Week 4.
|
||||||
3.
Documentation and Assessment
|
From Month 6, Week 1 to Month 7, Week 4.
Deliverable
A
Delivered by Month 7, Week 4.
|
Task |
Person-Weeks |
Direct
Salary |
Overhead
(119.34%) |
Total
Cost |
||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
M-1 | P-2 | Total | ||||
1.
Review Previous Work
|
1.5 | 3.0 | 4.5 | $6,861 | $8,187 | $15,048 |
2.
Evaluate Massachusetts Context for Sources of Revenue
|
6.4 | 24.0 | 30.4 | $42,787 | $51,062 | $93,850 |
3.
Documentation and Assessment
|
2.5 | 2.0 | 4.5 | $7,341 | $8,761 | $16,102 |
Total
|
10.4 | 29.0 | 39.4 | $56,989 | $68,011 | $125,000 |
1 Transit Tax Increment Financing is a tool used to leverage future property tax revenues from new development to support transit infrastructure in a defined area.
2 Ronaldson, Elizabeth Winters, and Richard Henderson, “Peer Agency Revenue Sources Comparison Value Capture Mechanisms and Case Studies” (2022), presented at the virtual MBTA Board Meeting, MBTA Audit and Finance Subcommittee, on September 15, 2022. https://cdn.mbta.com/sites/default/files/2022-09/MBTA_Funding%20Comparrison_vSent%20Board.pdf.;
Massachusetts Department of Transportation, “2022 State Planning and Research Program I.” (2021). https://www.mass.gov/doc/download-the-2022-spr-work-program/download.
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Boston Region MPO
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