Snohomish County, Wash. – Residents and commuters along
three high congestion roads in Snohomish County are being targeted by a
Community Transit program urging them to get out of their cars. Drivers can
even get personalized assistance to plan a bus trip, find a biking or walking route,
or join a carpool or vanpool.
Plus, they have a chance to win
some incentive prizes.
Curb the
Congestion is a partnership between Community Transit and Snohomish County to
reduce traffic and encourage healthy travel options on congested roadways. The
program provides people who live and drive along the designated roads with
information and incentives to reduce their drive-alone trips. A dedicated Curb
the Congestion specialist provides one-on-one help with planning trips.
Participants
who log their alternative trips at least 12 days a month are eligible to win a
$250 monthly incentive prize or a $1,000 quarterly incentive prize.
Curb the Congestion
is funded by Snohomish County through development mitigation fees and federal
grants, and operated by Community Transit. The county identified three specific
high congestion corridors because they could benefit the most from this type of
program based on the existing infrastructure (i.e., roads, bike lanes,
sidewalks and transit facilities), constraints to further road improvements and
development patterns.
The
three corridors are:
·
164th
Street SW/SE (between Lynnwood and Mill Creek)
·
128th
Street (between Everett and Mill Creek)
·
20th
Street SE (between Lake Stevens and Everett)
Anyone 16
years or older who lives or works in Snohomish County and travels one of these
corridors can participate. When signing up, participants will be encouraged to
bus, carpool, vanpool, bike or walk instead of driving alone.
In
addition to utilizing a travel specialist, Curb the Congestion participants
have new web tools and resources available. An easy online calendar helps
people log their trips and tracks eligibility for prize drawings. The calendar
can also track the impact of an individual’s new travel alternative, such as
air pollution prevented and money saved.
The
website also has resources for bus information, maps, carpool matching, a “Bike
Buddy” program and other tools.
Information
and registration is available at www.communitytransit.org/CurbIt.
Residents without Internet access can contact (425) 438-6136 or CurbIt@commtrans.org.
Curb the Congestion was first
launched in May 2008 on the 164th Street corridor after the county
declared that road at “ultimate capacity.” In the first 18 months of the
program, about 400 people cut their drive-alone trips about 60 percent, and a
follow-up survey indicated that about 90 percent of participants continued
using bus or vanpool after their formal participation ended.
Community Transit strives to help
Puget Sound commuters think transit first. With 62 local and commuter bus
routes and one of the nation’s largest vanpool programs, the agency is a leader
in finding new ways to make alternative transportation an attractive option.
Call Community Transit at (425) 353-RIDE or (800) 562-1375 for bus information,
or (888) 814-1300 for carpool or vanpool information, or go to www.communitytransit.org.