Title 23HighwaysRelease 119-73

§177 Neighborhood access and equity grant program

Title 23 › Chapter CHAPTER 1— - FEDERAL-AID HIGHWAYS › § 177

Last updated Apr 6, 2026|Official source

Summary

Provides $1,893,000,000 for fiscal year 2022, available until September 30, 2026, to the Federal Highway Administration to run a competitive grant program. The money pays for projects that make neighborhoods safer and easier to walk, bike, and reach by affordable transit. Grants can pay to remove, reuse, replace, retrofit, or cap high-speed or grade-separated roads that cut through communities; build or improve complete streets, multiuse trails, greenways, or active-transportation links; and improve access to key places and transit hubs. Grants also fund ways to cut air and noise pollution, manage stormwater, reduce urban heat, and add safety features in disadvantaged or underserved areas. Planning and local capacity work is supported too, such as air-quality monitoring, pollution and equity assessments, anti-displacement planning, project predevelopment, public engagement, and technical assistance. Eligible applicants include states, local governments and political subdivisions, the entity named in section 207(m)(1)(E), U.S. territories, special-purpose districts or public authorities with transportation roles, metropolitan planning organizations, and—only for planning grants—nonprofits or colleges that partner with an eligible public entity. A covered “facility” means (1) a surface transportation feature that blocks community connections because of high speed or grade separation, or (2) a surface facility that creates pollution, noise, stormwater, or other burdens in disadvantaged or underserved communities. An extra $1,262,000,000 (same availability to Sept 30, 2026) is set aside for projects in qualifying disadvantaged communities that meet certain community-benefit, anti-displacement, or local-hiring criteria. Another $50,000,000 is provided for guidance, training, subgrants to build local capacity, and FHWA administration. Projects are treated as Federal-aid highway work, must follow the USDOT Disadvantaged Business Enterprise rules when run through state DOTs, and normally get up to 80% federal funding (up to 100% in disadvantaged or underserved communities). Funds cannot be used to add through travel lanes for single-occupant cars and are not counted against limits on Federal-aid highway program funds.

Full Legal Text

Title 23, §177

Highways — Source: USLM XML via OLRC

(a)In addition to amounts otherwise available, there is appropriated for fiscal year 2022, out of any money in the Treasury not otherwise appropriated, $1,893,000,000, to remain available until September 30, 2026, to the Administrator of the Federal Highway Administration for competitive grants to eligible entities described in subsection (b)—
(1)to improve walkability, safety, and affordable transportation access through projects that are context-sensitive—
(A)to remove, remediate, or reuse a facility described in subsection (c)(1);
(B)to replace a facility described in subsection (c)(1) with a facility that is at-grade or lower speed;
(C)to retrofit or cap a facility described in subsection (c)(1);
(D)to build or improve complete streets, multiuse trails, regional greenways, or active transportation networks and spines; or
(E)to provide affordable access to essential destinations, public spaces, or transportation links and hubs;
(2)to mitigate or remediate negative impacts on the human or natural environment resulting from a facility described in subsection (c)(2) in a disadvantaged or underserved community through—
(A)noise barriers to reduce impacts resulting from a facility described in subsection (c)(2);
(B)technologies, infrastructure, and activities to reduce surface transportation-related greenhouse gas emissions and other air pollution;
(C)natural infrastructure, pervious, permeable, or porous pavement, or protective features to reduce or manage stormwater run-off resulting from a facility described in subsection (c)(2);
(D)infrastructure and natural features to reduce or mitigate urban heat island hot spots in the transportation right-of-way or on surface transportation facilities; or
(E)safety improvements for vulnerable road users; and
(3)for planning and capacity building activities in disadvantaged or underserved communities to—
(A)identify, monitor, or assess local and ambient air quality, emissions of transportation greenhouse gases, hot spot areas of extreme heat or elevated air pollution, gaps in tree canopy coverage, or flood prone transportation infrastructure;
(B)assess transportation equity or pollution impacts and develop local anti-displacement policies and community benefit agreements;
(C)conduct predevelopment activities for projects eligible under this subsection;
(D)expand public participation in transportation planning by individuals and organizations in disadvantaged or underserved communities; or
(E)administer or obtain technical assistance related to activities described in this subsection.
(b)An eligible entity referred to in subsection (a) is—
(1)a State;
(2)a unit of local government;
(3)a political subdivision of a State;
(4)an entity described in section 207(m)(1)(E);
(5)a territory of the United States;
(6)a special purpose district or public authority with a transportation function;
(7)a metropolitan planning organization (as defined in section 134(b)(2)); or
(8)with respect to a grant described in subsection (a)(3), in addition to an eligible entity described in paragraphs (1) through (7), a nonprofit organization or institution of higher education that has entered into a partnership with an eligible entity described in paragraphs (1) through (7).
(c)A facility referred to in subsection (a) is—
(1)a surface transportation facility for which high speeds, grade separation, or other design factors create an obstacle to connectivity within a community; or
(2)a surface transportation facility which is a source of air pollution, noise, stormwater, or other burden to a disadvantaged or underserved community.
(d)(1)In addition to amounts otherwise available, there is appropriated for fiscal year 2022, out of any money in the Treasury not otherwise appropriated, $1,262,000,000, to remain available until September 30, 2026, to the Administrator of the Federal Highway Administration to provide grants for projects in communities described in paragraph (2) for the same purposes and administered in the same manner as described in subsection (a).
(2)A community referred to in paragraph (1) is a community that—
(A)is economically disadvantaged, underserved, or located in an area of persistent poverty;
(B)has entered or will enter into a community benefits agreement with representatives of the community;
(C)has an anti-displacement policy, a community land trust, or a community advisory board in effect; or
(D)has demonstrated a plan for employing local residents in the area impacted by the activity or project proposed under this section.
(e)(1)A project carried out under subsection (a) or (d) shall be treated as a project on a Federal-aid highway.
(2)Funds made available for a grant under this section and administered by or through a State department of transportation shall be expended in compliance with the U.S. Department of Transportation’s Disadvantaged Business Enterprise Program.
(f)The Federal share of the cost of an activity carried out using a grant awarded under this section shall be not more than 80 percent, except that the Federal share of the cost of a project in a disadvantaged or underserved community may be up to 100 percent.
(g)In addition to amounts otherwise available, there is appropriated for fiscal year 2022, out of any money in the Treasury not otherwise appropriated, $50,000,000, to remain available until September 30, 2026, to the Administrator of the Federal Highway Administration for—
(1)guidance, technical assistance, templates, training, or tools to facilitate efficient and effective contracting, design, and project delivery by units of local government;
(2)subgrants to units of local government to build capacity of such units of local government to assume responsibilities to deliver surface transportation projects; and
(3)operations and administration of the Federal Highway Administration.
(h)Amounts made available under this section shall not—
(1)be subject to any restriction or limitation on the total amount of funds available for implementation or execution of programs authorized for Federal-aid highways; and
(2)be used for a project for additional through travel lanes for single-occupant passenger vehicles.

Reference

Citations & Metadata

Citation

23 U.S.C. § 177

Title 23Highways

Last Updated

Apr 6, 2026

Release point: 119-73