The Columbus Dispatch

Bus changes begin Monday — get ready

- By Kimball Perry

Mike Petrovsky thinks he’s ready.

The Dublin man stood at Broad and High streets Downtown, leaned against the Statehouse fence and pointed at a chart inside a nearby COTA bus shelter.

“I’m going to have to look at that chart for a while,” Petrovsky, 47, said.

The chart shows the redesigned routes that begin Monday for what COTA officials say is the biggest change in the public transit agency’s history as it seeks to provide more bus service to the outer reaches of its territory and increase weekend hours.

COTA has spent almost $10 million since 2013 planning for and implementi­ng the Transit Schedule Redesign. It comes as ridership has dropped by 500,000 from 2014 to 2016 to 18.8 million trips.

“I’ve got my regular route I take every day down pat,” Petrovsky said of his new route to and from work. “The transfer is going to be confusing. They’re not all stopping on Broad and High all the time now.”

COTA sought to stop the “bus bunching” at that intersecti­on by dispersing some of the many routes that now start or end there to Third, Fourth and Front streets Downtown. The goal: faster, more direct routes for most of the riders, and more service to Easton Town Center, Rickenback­er Internatio­nal Airport, Polaris and other burgeoning job spots.

All but two of the routes will be re-numbered.

“I’m not ready,” Ashley Lemon, 25, of the East Side, admitted. “It’s going to be confusing, but I’ll make it work.”

She’ll rely on a transit app on her smart phone and the COTA website for informatio­n on the new routes, but she knows it will be a difficult transition for most.

“Monday is going to be crazy,” Lemon said. “I think everybody is going to be crazy, probably including the (COTA) drivers.”

COTA sent teams to Jacksonvil­le in 2014 and Houston in 2015 to watch as similar changes were implemente­d. Public transit teams from Baltimore and Rochester will be in Columbus watching how COTA implements its redesign.

COTA expects a manic Monday.

“We understand it may be a little confusing at first,” said Valerie Hawes, COTA’s Transit System Redesign communicat­ion and training specialist.

To address that, COTA has been working for months to tell riders about the changes and how they affect each route.

“We’ve got a pretty comprehens­ive effort going to educate people on the route level,” said Curtis Stitt, president and CEO of COTA.

COTA offers informatio­n on its website, by phone at (614) 308-4400 and on new signs and charts at stops. In addition, workers have been taking to the street armed with iPads and dressed in red to talk about the changes and show individual riders their new routes.

The “street teams” of about 70 workers have been doing that at the 20 busiest stops, 10 of which are Downtown.

“They’ve been at it for six weeks now,” Hawes said. “Once they speak with someone, then they understand better how this impacts them. For some, it’s a better option.”

Bus rides will be free for a week beginning Monday to help alleviate the expected angst and try to hook more riders on public transporta­tion.

“We want them to ride it as much as possible on us and learn about the new system,” Stitt said.

The redesign, experts tell COTA, will decrease ridership initially. A 10 percent ridership increase, though, is projected by 2020 as COTA seeks to reach its goal of 25 million trips per year by 2025.

COTA knows the first step to change will be hectic, but worth it.

“I think people will adapt pretty quickly,” Hawes said.

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 ?? [JONATHAN QUILTER/DISPATCH] ?? Rickie Causey of Paul Peterson Co. removes a “sign hood” on East Broad Street to reveal the new COTA route informatio­n for routes beginning on Monday.
[JONATHAN QUILTER/DISPATCH] Rickie Causey of Paul Peterson Co. removes a “sign hood” on East Broad Street to reveal the new COTA route informatio­n for routes beginning on Monday.

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