Despite the Chicago region’s extensive transit network, 77% of its commuters drive to work.1 As the transportation sector is the largest source of greenhouse gas emissions in the United States,2 city policymakers should incentivize public transit usage.
Commuter benefit programs allow employees to set aside tax-free dollars for commuting costs. If an employer sets up such a program, the IRS allows employees to elect a pre-tax paycheck deduction up to $270 per month for transit or vanpooling expenses, and up to $270 per month for work-related parking expenses. Effectively, such programs make transit up to 40% cheaper for riders.
Several of the nation’s biggest municipalities have adopted mandatory commuter benefits ordinances,3 which require certain employers to offer their employees access to pre-tax transit benefits. Maximizing access to transit-based tax incentives would help curb greenhouse gas emissions and air pollution, promote economic equity for those who do not own a car, and reduce traffic-related fatalities.
Modeled off of ordinances in other U.S. cities, a Chicago commuter benefit ordinance would apply to all employers (public, private, or non-profit) with at least 20 employees who work at least 20 hours per week. Employers would register their business via a centralized platform, and offer at least one of the following benefits to their employees:
In order to promote public transit over driving, the ordinance would not mandate that employers provide their employees any parking-related commuter benefits.
BACP would enforce the ordinance, charging employers who do not offer the transit benefit $270 per month (equivalent to the IRS benefit maximum) per employee.