Archive for the ‘Announcements’ Category

Corridor MPO Long Range Plan

2009-12-24

Every five years the Corridor MPO updates their Long Range Plan for the area. This lays out goals and plans related to population growth and how that affects transportation for the next several decades. The MPO has started this process for the 2010 update and is pulling out new ways of connecting with the community to gather input.

The first open house was held on December 3rd and it included an interactive session after staff presented information about the changes expected in our area. Participants were asked to lay out different development sites to accommodate the expected population growth, and then choose transportation projects that would be funded to handle citizens’ travel. I think this is a great exercise to promote understanding of how growth development and transportation are directly related to the quality of services we receive. If we continue to sprawl, we will have to increase access to more streets, setting ourselves up for higher maintenance costs or more roads in need of repair. You can see a video and recap of the activity in this post from Adam Belz and replay the live blogging he did during the open house.

There will be more interactive sessions between now and June 2010, so stay tuned, but don’t keep your input bottled up! If you have something to say, let the Corridor MPO know now through the Connections 2040 survey or directly through the MPO’s comment form. Also, take a look at the Connections 2040 site to learn more about the process and, eventually, see the maps that each table created during the interactive session.

Finally, we’d like to hear if you attended the first Connections 2040 open house and your thoughts on the interactive portion. Was it interesting? Do you have a better understanding about how the Corridor MPO looks at projects? If you weren’t able to go, would future activities like this encourage you to attend?

CR Transit Study Open House #3

2009-11-20

This coming Tuesday, November 24th is the third and final CR Transit Study open house where we will see the big reveal! Your feedback has been combined and now it’s time to see how CR Transit interpreted it. Even though this is the final open house for this study, I want to be very clear. This is NOT the last opportunity to share feedback. This is just one round of, in what should be many more, changes to the CR Transit system. Things still won’t be perfect, but I do hope we’ll see tangible improvements. Please show up for this open house to cheer or jeer changes that will be made this time and continue the conversation to make our public transit better.

The open house will be held at the African American Museum from 1 to 3:00 pm, and the Crowne Plaza from 6 to 8:00 pm. NTS will again provide rides for free after the evening open house. Please call them at 319-286-5725 by Monday at 4 pm to set up a ride.

The full press release can be found on the Corridor MPO website.

Tips and Tricks: Free Rides

2009-11-04

Did you know that bus rides in downtown Cedar Rapids are free? Most people don’t. Transit systems unintentionally create communities of users and as these users talk, they tend to share tips on navigating the system. These tips could be loop holes, but many times they are little known facts that can make your life easier or save you money.

We’re trying to scare up some tips about the CR Transit system to share the knowledge, and today’s tip will help save you money and maybe a little time too. If you get on and off a bus within the Cedar Rapids downtown area, which includes the Lot 44 transfer site, your trip is free! Now downtown Cedar Rapids isn’t terribly large, however, this could come in quite handy during the cold, rainy, and snowy months to make it more comfortable between locations. The most practical use of this service feature is to get a free trip from downtown to Lot 44 to catch another bus or pick up your car.

You won’t find this tip posted anywhere, at least not to my knowledge, but I learned about it from several of the bus drivers as I was catching a bus to the transfer site. This also means that there isn’t an official posting of what CR Transit considers the downtown boundaries, so I did some investigating. My source (a bus driver) says that the free area is between 1st Ave and 12th Ave and 1st St West and 8th St East as shown in the map below.

Downtown Buses

Give this tip a try now that we’re entering the cold season, and save some time and money.

Any other tips or tricks you have for public transit? Please share in the comments or email us and we’ll try to research it and share what we find.

Map cropped from the Corridor MPO site.

CR Transit Study Open House #2

2009-10-17

Right around the weekend corner is the second CR Transit Study open house. During this round, the consultants from SRF Consulting Group and Bourne Transit will present options that Cedar Rapids could implement to improve our bus system. The consultants and city staff are asking that citizens participate with feedback about what they like and dislike about each of the options. The feedback will be used to create a final recommendation, potentially combining several of the options presented.

There will be two open house times to accommodate more schedules on this Tuesday, October 20th, and the same material will be available at both. The first is from 1pm-3pm in the Celebration room of the African American Museum, located across from the transit station on the corner of 12th Ave and 2nd St in Cedar Rapids. The second will be from 6pm-8pm in Ballroom 2 of the Crowne Plaza. If you are unable to make either of these times, you can still share feedback on the Corridor MPO site once the presentation material is posted, and you can be sure that I’ll share it whenever it’s available.

NTS will be providing free return transportation again, so please contact them at 319-286-5725 by 4:00pm on Monday the 19th if you will need a ride.

I hope to see you there, but more importantly, voice your opinion however you can, whether it be in person or through the website!

Full details can be found in the CR Transit Open House II_Press Release.


Transit Study Open House #1 Boards

2009-09-28

Hurrah, the open house boards were posted today! You can access the PDF here and dive into the data goodness.

The second page has stats from the survey conducted earlier this summer. I still can’t believe there were close to 800 respondents!

Page 3 has information about current CR Transit riders and the current fleet. You’ve probably heard that Cedar Rapids has one of the oldest fleets in the country, and now you have the proof. Standard bus life is 12 years or 500,000 miles. Even with the 4 brand new buses CR Transit received this year, most of the fleet should be considered beyond dead.

The rest of the file is maps, and I’m most interested in the “Productivity” and “Performance” maps on pages 7 and 8. These show which locations are used most heavily and where some rework can be done. Something important to note while looking at page 7 in particular, is that there was this big flood in 2008, so the large red and orange areas right next to the river won’t just be stripped out. More thought will need to go into how to handle access to the flood affected areas to balance current use, while (potentially) providing easy service increases as the areas recover.

Those are my thoughts, now share what you see in the data.

[PDF provided by the Corridor MPO]

Event Reminders

2009-09-18

Just a friendly reminder of some important events around the corner!

Tomorrow is the Route 5N bus party which will introduce our first route that also goes through Marion. Check out the details here.

Next Tuesday is the first Transit Study Open House where helpful people anxiously await your important input! Read more information here.

Introduce yourself if we haven’t met, and I will do my darndest to remember it after the first time!

Making Changes

2009-09-11

I’m approaching 4 years of using the Cedar Rapids Transit bus system, and I have yet to meet someone who thinks the system is as good as it can get. Of course this is an easy statement because something like transit can never be perfect, but I believe it can be improved. In order to do this we need to make changes and that is not easy.

The Corridor Metropolitan Planning Organization (MPO) is currently funding a study to improve our system and gather input on what changes should look like after they are implemented. Part of this is a quick survey you can take online about how you use, or don’t use, our system.  This is important for everyone to take because we need data on current users and the potential users, even the people who say they will never use it. Please take the survey here.

There will also be an open house held on September 22nd at the Crowne Plaza Five Seasons Hotel. You can come between 6pm and 7:30pm, but make sure you’re there for the short transit system presentation at 6:30!

These efforts are just the beginning and certainly won’t solve all of our system’s problems, but they are key to not only better transit options, but also to a better corridor. We want to see economic development in our community and public transit can help by providing jobs, property value, and stimulate redevelopment. Also, a more efficient system can allow the transit dependent to become more productive and open doors to better job opportunities, more time with their family, and an overall better lifestyle. I’ll stop here before I start to sound like I’ve jumped off the deep end of the Utopian pool, just make plans to spend a small amount of time to provide feedback.

New Bus Party Site

2009-09-07

The Bus Parties are an important part of improving public transit and it’s about time they had a better site. From now on all Bus Party information will be published here including new Bus Party recap posts! Hopefully this format is easier to use, but we always welcome feedback on how to improve. Comments or email are the best way to share your thoughts. See you at the next Bus Party!


Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 58 other followers