If you live in the D.C. area, the Office of Planning wants you to get paid up to $12,000 to avoid a car commute.

Wait, really? Car commuting costs a metric pantload in fuel and destroys your soul — isn't this like trying to pay someone not to slowly pummel themselves to death with Faberge eggs? But some folks are so wedded to their suburban lifestyles that they apparently need a further incentive to give it up — or they find city living so exorbitant that they can't afford to move. So D.C.'s Office of Planning has set aside $200,000 for bribing people to move closer to work.

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It's not quite that simple, of course. First, your employer has to offer you money to move somewhere more convenient, closer to work, or closer to a Metro station. Only then will the city pay up — they'll match up to $6,000 of employer contribution. There's also the fact that, in a high-cost city like D.C., you may need to either have a very compressible family or dip into your savings. Moving from a suburban house to a city dwelling of comparable size would cost way more than $12,000 in rent, and that's just in the first year. But it's nice to see a city putting its — and your employer's — money where its mouth is in terms of reducing car travel, encouraging public transit, and building a thriving urban community.

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