Retired TriMet paratransit bus helps non-profit’s students rebuild lives

July 28, 2021
TriMet community partner, Constructing Hope, will use the bus in pre-apprenticeship job training program for people transitioning through the criminal justice system.

TriMet has donated a retired LIFT paratransit bus to nonprofit Portland-based Constructing Hope, a workforce development, training and job placement program. 

The people who participate in the job training and placement program at Constructing Hope’s workforce development, training and job placement center don’t have a lot of personal possessions. TriMet notes they live on a low income and many spent time in prison. What they lack in material belongings, they fulfill, for now, with hope and ambition. They found Constructing Hope because they wanted to rebuild their lives. 

“Constructing Hope is a pre-apprenticeship training program. We target formerly incarcerated, or as we call them, ‘newly returning citizens,’” explained Pat Daniels, who serves as executive director of the nonprofit. “The mission is to create self-sufficiency through education and training in the construction industry.” 

“What the students accomplish by completing this program is truly inspiring,” said TriMet General Manager Sam Desue, Jr. “TriMet is humbled by the opportunity to support an initiative that produces positive results for individuals, their families and our community as a whole.” 

Most of the students at Constructing Hope are familiar with TriMet. Some may even use transit to get to and from the training center in Northeast Portland. Soon, they’ll use a retired TriMet vehicle to access activities that play an important role in their workforce training. 

“This bus is going to be life-changing for us,” said Daniels, who planned to use the bus for field trips that help students understand the scope of working in the trades. “We see students who come in wanting to be an electrician and leave as a plumber. Or they come in wanting to be a plumber, and they become a carpenter.” 

Constructing Hope is one of a growing number of TriMet community partners to benefit from a donated vehicle. They’ll use what was formerly a LIFT paratransit bus to take students on outings. At more than 10-years old and with nearly 233,000 miles, the ADA-accessible bus has reached the end of its functional life for TriMet services, but it can serve the students at Constructing Hope for years to come. 

“This is a collaboration that’s going to make it better for the community as a whole,” said TriMet Board of Directors member Keith Edwards, who also serves on the board for Constructing Hope. “It’s changing lives by helping people get viable jobs and opportunities and be proud about their accomplishments.”