Skip to Content
Streetsblog California home
Streetsblog California home
Log In

Columbus's experiment with free transit for downtown workers is paying off.

Transit ridership among downtown workers has more than doubled in the year since a program began providing free transit passes for all downtown workers, the local news site Columbus Underground reports.

Before the "C-pass" program, only 5 percent of downtown workers commuted by bus. Today, the number is 10 to 14 percent, the news site reports.

In total, 430 companies have enrolled in the program, and about 14,800 workers have taken advantage of it, out of a total of 85,000 downtown, according to a press release from Capital Crossroads, a downtown special-improvement district. C-Pass users are taking about 255,000 trips on Central Ohio Transit Authority buses weekly.

According to a survey, 68 percent of users said the C-pass program was what motivated them to take transit; 93 percent had access to a private car.

The program was originally proposed as a solution to a downtown parking crunch that was hampering the growth of employers. The free transit passes offer an alternative to adding expensive, subsidized parking downtown; the program already has enough users to have eliminated the need for about two parking garages, a spokesperson for Capital Crossroads says.

It's also popular with employers. Among those surveyed, 17 said the program encouraged them to renew their leases. Interest in the program is growing among employers outside of the central business district, too, Columbus Underground's Walker Evans reports.

The program is expected to cost $5 million over two-and-a-half years. It is funded partly by assessments on downtown land owners and partly by grants, including a grant from the federally funded metropolitan planning organization MORPC.

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog California

Friday’s Headlines

Quiet (??) shift in administrator of e-bike incentive program; Saltzman's 12 years on the BART board; How to make progress on transit during a Trump administration; More

January 3, 2025

New Bike Champions Among Incoming Class of CA Legislators

Among the new members of the California legislature sworn in at the beginning of December are several who have included bicycle and pedestrian improvements among their stated priorities.

January 3, 2025

Bike Lanes Extended on Reseda Boulevard Are First Clear Measure HLA Upgrade

Measure HLA requirements triggered 350 new feet of bike lanes on Reseda Boulevard, making Southern California's longest on-street bikeway even longer

January 3, 2025

Friday Video: Even 1950s Disney Knew ‘Car Brain’ Was Real

75 years later, this Disney cartoon about how cars change our way of seeing the world proved shockingly prescient.

January 3, 2025

Thursday’s Headlines

Some New Year's Resolutions for biking; Metro has other ideas than a gondola for Dodger Stadium; CA's high-speed rail visionary; More

January 2, 2025
See all posts