º£½ÇÉçÇø

Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Area transit agencies aim to make getting around the region easier for people with disabilities

An EZConnect bus.
Nick Swartsell
/
WVXU
An EZConnect bus. The pilot program eliminates the need to transfer between the Northern Kentucky, Metro, and Butler County transit systems for people with disabilities who rely on public transit.

Lynn Eldred lives in Hebron, Kentucky, but often has doctor appointments in Cincinnati and even further north. She relies on a wheelchair and public transit to get around.

That has meant arranging rides with up to three different transit agencies and then waiting for each of them to pick her up. Transfers can be tricky, she says, and the whole thing is very time-consuming.

"I went up to Butler County one time, and I left at 6:30 in the morning, had an hour appointment, and got home at 7 that night," she says.

Subscribe to The Daily View

Get a curated snapshot of the day's need-to-know news delivered weekday mornings.
* indicates required

Now those agencies are teaming up. Starting Monday, Metro, the Transit Authority of Northern Kentucky, and the Butler County Regional Transit Authority will share small buses they'll dispatch to people needing rides across the region. A computer system will match riders with buses to create efficient routes.

The pilot program is called EZConnect. Metro Board Chair Blake Ethridge says it will eliminate the need to get rides from each individual transit agency as riders travel between their service areas. He pledged the program will provide "one call, one seat" service.

"[This] eliminates one of the biggest barriers in paratransit: fragmentation between service areas," he said at a ribbon-cutting launching the program Monday.

Metro has been working on the idea since 2021, officials say. The local transit agencies also collaborated with , a multi-state alliance of over 30 public transit agencies based in Northern Ohio. The group has been working on its own version of the program.

Metro says the pilot program will allow the transit agency to work out bugs in the system before a full launch in the near future.

Read more:

Nick came to WVXU in 2020. He has reported from a nuclear waste facility in the deserts of New Mexico, the White House press pool, a canoe on the Mill Creek, and even his desk one time.