Laketran will begin two new routes that will serve key destinations in Lake County, Ohio.
Laketran’s two new routes – Route 8 and Route 9 – will improve transportation to Lake County’s largest industrial corridor serving 300 employers with access to 7,500 jobs.
The new service will begin Sept. 14, 2020.
“City of Mentor’s Tyler Boulevard is the major arterial connecting 10 industrial boulevards lined with over 300 employers and 7,500 jobs, making it the seventh largest concentration of manufacturing companies in the state,” explained Laketran CEO Ben Capelle. “Requests for fixed-route transit service to Tyler Boulevard, Mentor-on-the Lake and Mentor Headlands, have been going on for 20 years from both employers and residents,”
Laketran’s new Route 8 will connect Tyler Boulevard to major destinations including Lakeland Community College, Great Lakes Mall, Mentor Park-n-Ride, Mentor High School, Mentor Civic Center area, Mentor-on-the-Lake, Mentor Headlands and Laketran Headquarters in Painesville Township, operating hourly on weekdays and every two-hours on Saturdays. Service will operate from 6:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m.
The agency held multiple public meetings to gather input from residents and businesses on the needs of the community to design the routes.
“During our public hearing process and focus groups with Mentor businesses, we learned we also needed to better connect the east end of the county to jobs along Tyler Boulevard, so in addition to Route 8 in Mentor, we have launched Route 9 so residents in eastern Lake County can better access jobs,” continued Capelle. “These routes will fill a transit gap in the center of the county with improved connectivity throughout our entire system, making it easier for customers to transfer in county or to Cleveland using one of our Park-n-Ride routes.”
Route 9 will provide peak service connecting downtown Painesville and Tyler Boulevard with service to Diamond Centre. Service will operate weekdays from 5:30 a.m. to 8:30 a.m. and 2:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m.
Route 9 service will operate with a smaller Dial-a-Ride style bus equipped with amenities of a traditional fixed-route bus including bike racks, stop cords, a destination sign and fare box.
The new routes, made possible by the passage of Laketran’s quarter of one percent sales tax levy last November, will provide access for nearly 58,000 residents and to 33,000 jobs.
“One of the primary roles of transit is to increase economic activity, and one of the most impactful ways transit does that is by providing a reliable way to get people to work,” said Laketran Board President Brian Falkowski. “Lake County voters passed our sales tax levy based on a promise to improve access to job corridors with this route in mind. Even though the current pandemic has created uncertain times, we are committed to fulfilling that promise, especially when people may be looking for new job opportunities.”
Laketran will also make a slight route change to Route 3 along Lakeshore Boulevard in Willoughby to travel along Tamarac Boulevard and Lost Nation Road to better serve the residential area.