Title 23 › Chapter CHAPTER 6— - INFRASTRUCTURE FINANCE › § 610
Allows the U.S. Secretary of Transportation to make written agreements with States to set up State infrastructure banks that lend money or give other kinds of credit help for eligible transportation projects. States (or groups of States) can create single-State or multistate banks. For fiscal years 2022 through 2026, a State may put up to 10% of certain highway, transit, and rail federal funds into the bank’s highway, transit, or rail accounts, and may put proceeds from a secured loan into the bank’s rural projects fund. Federal deposits count as capitalization grants. The bank can make loans or other credit help to public or private project sponsors — with non-rural accounts able to fund up to 100% of a project and the rural fund up to 80%. Initial federal assistance can’t be a grant. Loans can be subordinated, must start repayment no later than 5 years after project completion (or opening to traffic for highways), and must be repaid within 30 years after the first payment. States must put in at least 25% of each federal capitalization grant from nonfederal sources (with a lower highway percentage allowed if the State’s nonfederal share under section 120(b) is lower), keep the bank financially sound, credit and invest earnings as allowed, get metropolitan planning organization written agreement for projects in urban areas over 200,000 people, and send annual reports. The Secretary can stop more federal deposits if a State does not follow its agreement. For FY2022–2026, up to 2% of the federal money in a bank may pay reasonable bank administration costs. Definitions (one line each): capital project — as defined in 49 U.S.C. 5302; other forms of credit assistance — things like credit enhancements, reserves, interest subsidies, guarantees, lease or bond support, and similar debt tools; State — as defined in section 401; capitalization — putting initial capital into the bank; cooperative agreement — the written agreement between a State and the Secretary; loan — repayable financial help from the bank; guarantee — the bank agreeing to cover some borrower obligations; initial assistance — the first federal-funded loans or credit help; leverage/leveraged — using debt to increase bank funds or having potential liabilities above the bank’s capital; rural infrastructure project and rural projects fund — as defined in section 601.
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Legislative History
Reference
Citation
23 U.S.C. § 610
Title 23 — Highways
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73