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As a subscriber you can listen to articles at work, in the car, or while you work out. Subscribe NowAbout a dozen Hoosier communities will split $51 million in state funding for public infrastructure set to support construction of 2,400 homes.
It’s the Residential Housing Infrastructure Assistance Program’s first round of awards. Lawmakers authorized the revolving loan fund last year.
“We would have done what we had to do. But this very much helps,” Jamestown Clerk-Treasurer Lori Hieston said.
Her Boone County community of nearly 1,000 residents is growing.
“When a house comes up for sale here in town, it gets sold pretty quickly,” Hieston said.
The town also wants more local talent to serve a primary employer.
Fukai Toyotetsu Indiana Corp., a Jamestown-based automotive supplier, must largely hire from out of town, per Hieston.
“(This is) providing an opportunity for housing where people can buy a house and live close to where they work,” she said.
Jamestown is preparing for a 199-house development, but its sewer system can only take half the prospective addition. The town plans to use its $1.1 million award to add another tank to the plant.
Fund details
The program stems from 2023’s House Enrolled Act 1005, led by homebuilder Rep. Doug Miller, R-Elkhart.
“I think we’re really trying to look at Indiana and say we’ve got opportunities across the state to help areas that haven’t been helped before,” he said in committee.
The legislation allows awardees to use the money on sidewalks, curbs, sewer, water and other infrastructure.
Such expenses are usually built into the cost of residential development projects, but developer and builder groups testified infrastructure costs can hinder housing projects.
Lawmakers hoped to give residential development a boost with low-interest loans for infrastructure expenses.
The Indiana Finance Authority (IFA), the program’s administrator, prioritized projects ready to move forward in the recently begun fiscal year, and in communities that have either recently completed housing studies or demonstrated a need for more inventory. Applicants were also required to have secured other funding to contribute to their projects.
Jamestown was one of 11 communities to obtain an award through the program, which prioritizes rural communities. The law stipulates that 70% of the money go toward local units of government with populations under 50,000 people. The remaining 30% is available for larger cities.
According to an IFA memo, here are the recipients:
• Goshen, $11 million
• Clarksville, $8.6 million for two projects
• Auburn, $5.5 million
• Indianapolis, $5 million
• Michigan City, $4.6 million
• Gas City, $4.5 million for two projects
• Fort Wayne, $4 million
• Vincennes, $3.1 million
• Ossian, $2.5 million
• Churubusco, $1.1 million
Each community will start repayment within a year of a project’s “substantial completion.” They have 20-year fixed interest rates and level annual debt service.
Hieston called the initiative a “good opportunity.”
“If we had to go secure money other ways, … it would be a high interest rate,” she added.
The Indiana Capital Chronicle is an independent, not-for-profit news organization that covers state government, policy and elections.
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It would be very interesting if the Indiana Capital Chronicle would track how the funds get spent. More of the money in these grants “appear” to get tied up in administrative channels and benefit the multiple developer’s/GC’s that seem to become involved to “help”.
While I understand the intent, at times I feel it would be best to give the monies available directly to the people looking for a home.
Hope the Chronicle will keep an eye out for our tax dollars.