Dayton Daily News

Proposed bus cuts leave riders in lurch

- By David Patch

For Judith Lerner, a Toledo Area Regional Paratransi­t Service van is the only way to the Toledo Museum of Art for a Sunday visit, or maybe a trip to a local park if the weather’s nice.

But that could stop if service cuts the Toledo Area Regional Transit Authority is contemplat­ing — which also would affect its paratransi­t operations — take effect as proposed Dec. 30.

“The weekend is big for me,” said Lerner, whose multiple physical ailments mean she relies on a motor wheelchair for personal mobility. “I like going to the art museum. I like going to the parks on Sunday.”

And while she doesn’t go to church, she knows people who do who rely on public transporta­tion and will be left in the lurch if, as proposed, TARTA drops all Sunday and holiday service.

“Churches don’t have vans that can accommodat­e. They don’t have lifts,” Lerner said Thursday at her North Toledo home.

Transit riders’ ability to get to church on Sunday was just one of numerous issues raised during TARTA hearings Thursday about the proposed cuts, which agency officials said are spurred by a financial crisis they blamed in large part on recent rejections of a plan to switch their local subsidy from a property tax to a sales tax.

On days buses still run, operating hours would be shorter, which speakers at the hearings said would affect either their own commutes to work or those of friends or relatives.

Losing the 10:30 p.m. bus departures from downtown Toledo “is going to be devastatin­g to me, personally” and to others who work late downtown, said Robin Hendricks, who lives in the city’s south end.

And Rebecca Blair of East Toledo said her brother depends on an early morning bus to get to work, while loss of the late buses would force her to give up her bowling night and other trips she often makes.

Bill Kelly, the authority’s planning director, laid blame for the bus system’s fiscal woes squarely at the feet of the Sylvania Township board of trustees, which in late July voted 2-1 to block a proposal that could have led to TARTA switching from property taxes to a 0.4-cent sales tax that would have boosted its local tax revenue from about $13 million to $20 million.

“It’s time to pay the piper for not having the opportunit­y to change our source of funding,” Kelly said.

Ernie Brancheau suggested that if the Sylvania Township vote was to blame for the transit authority’s financial crisis, it could start by cutting service to the township.

“We can talk until we’re blue in the face,” he said. “What can we do to get that member community to be more collaborat­ive?”

But Kelly said the agency has to impose the cuts equitably among all of its seven member jurisdicti­ons, which also include Sylvania city, Maumee, Waterville, Toledo, Ottawa Hills, and Rossford.

Township Trustee John Jennewine, meanwhile, said losing its ability to use certain federal funds for operating expenses instead of capital accounts — a factor James Gee, the transit authority’s general manager, blamed Monday for precipitat­ing a crisis — should not have been a surprise for TARTA.

“This is a perfect example of why we need new leadership at TARTA,” Jennewine said Thursday afternoon. “They should have known all along this was coming.”

Kelly said TARTA had been pushing to switch to a sales tax since 2009 “to avoid this situation” but that without unanimous support from member jurisdicti­ons, it can’t go on the ballot.

Along with reducing service days and hours, the proposed cuts include eliminatin­g a route in west Toledo, Sylvania, and Sylvania Township and trimming trips from several commuter express routes.

 ?? KATIE RAUSCH / THE BLADE ?? Judith Lerner, here at her home, uses a wheelchair and relies on the TARTA/TARPS service.
KATIE RAUSCH / THE BLADE Judith Lerner, here at her home, uses a wheelchair and relies on the TARTA/TARPS service.

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