Dayton Daily News

Free bus rides, museum visits mark foundation’s anniversar­y

- By Rita Price and Mark Ferenchik

To celebrate its 75th anniversar­y, the Columbus Foundation is picking up the tab for a full day of communityw­ide transporta­tion and cultural exploratio­n on Dec. 29.

All COTA bus rides will be free on the Saturday after Christmas, and no one will pay admission at six of central Ohio’s best-known museums and arts centers: the Columbus Museum of Art, COSI, the Franklin Park Conservato­ry, the National Veterans Memorial and Museum, Ohio History Connection and the Wexner Center for the Arts.

“It’s meant to be a gift to the community,” Doug Kridler, the foundation’s president and CEO, said during the Central Ohio Transit Authority’s board meeting Wednesday.

Although the promotion — being called “The Big Explore” — is aimed at boosting visits to those cultural institutio­ns, all COTA lines will be free to all riders, no matter their destinatio­n.

“If they want to take it to Easton to go Christmas shopping, they can,” said Natalie Parscher, a foundation spokeswoma­n.

Riders and attendees won’t have to show proof of residency. Even people who don’t know about the promotion won’t be asked to pay fares or admission fees. “It’ll just be a nice surprise,” Parscher said.

Jeni’s Splendid Ice Creams also is joining the celebratio­n by offering 75-cent scoops of ice cream at all Columbus-area shops on Dec. 29, the foundation said.

For families with tight budgets, the waiving of admission fees can go a long way. General admission to COSI, for example, is $25 for adults and $20 for children ages 2 to 12.

“It’s a great opportunit­y,” said COSI spokeswoma­n Jaclyn Reynolds. “I think it’s wonderful.”

She said COSI will extend its hours that day, opening from 10 a.m. until 7 p.m. instead of closing at 5 p.m.

Free admission at the other participat­ing museums and attraction­s is available during regular operating hours.

The free COTA rides will be offered during regular route times from 5 a.m. on Dec. 29 to 1 a.m. Dec. 30.

“This is going to be so meaningful to those who (normally) don’t have access,” said Trudy Bartley, chairwoman of the COTA board.

COTA estimated the fare revenue that typically would be collected that day at $20,000. The foundation didn’t have a ready estimate for the overall tab it will pay, but said it could be hundreds of thousands of dollars.

Kridler said the foundation wanted to give back on behalf of those who have helped it thrive. It was establishe­d in 1943, during World War II, and is the nation’s eighth-largest community foundation.

“It is the people of this community who, despite the odds, willed this to become one of the leading community philanthro­pies in the world,” he said in a news release. “What better way to celebrate our anniversar­y than to give everyone a chance to explore our community together?”

 ?? ADAM CAIRNS / DISPATCH ?? Colby Halker, an intern working with animals at COSI in Columbus, shows off a baby alligator named Tic Tock to children visiting on Wednesday.
ADAM CAIRNS / DISPATCH Colby Halker, an intern working with animals at COSI in Columbus, shows off a baby alligator named Tic Tock to children visiting on Wednesday.

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