RIPTA to Hold Public Hearings on Proposed Service

Changes with Many Improvements for Passengers

 

Hearings Will Be Held in Three Communities for Proposed Changes

That Would Take Effect in January 2022  

 

Providence, Rhode Island, October 1, 2021 – The Rhode Island Public Transit Authority (RIPTA) is seeking public input as it considers service changes, including many improvements for passengers, for January 2022.  The Authority will hold six public hearings on proposed changes to Routes 9x, 14, 20, 22, 28, 30, 51, 54, 58, 63, 73, 75, 76, 78, 80, 87, and 281. The proposed changes also include the creation of a new Route 16 that would run from Warwick to North Kingstown with stops at key destinations.  The hearings will be held afternoons and evenings on Tuesday, October 12, Wednesday, October 13, and Thursday, October 14, in Warwick, Woonsocket and South Kingstown. The full hearing schedule is below.

 

The changes are part of the seasonal service changes that RIPTA makes three times a year in response to ridership patterns and public feedback.  This round of proposed changes also reflects the Authority’s long-range plan to improve service in West Bay and South County communities; passengers will see many improvements.  Some of the highlights include:  the addition of Sunday service to Route 14 (West Bay), the addition of weekday trips to New England Institute of Tech’s Post Road campus and more frequent Sunday service on Route 20 (Elmwood Ave.), and a proposed new route, Route 16 (Bald Hill/Boston Neck), which will run from the Community College of Rhode Island’s Warwick campus to the retail plaza at the Quonset Business Park in North Kingstown.  This new route would include stops at the new Market Basket supermarket in Warwick, Cowesett Corners Shopping Center, New England Tech’s East Greenwich campus, and Wickford Village.

 

Other service improvements include longer service hours on Route 22 (Pontiac Ave.) and Route 30 (Arlington/Oaklawn), and the addition of a stop at the new Market Basket in Johnston on Route 28 (Broadway/Hartford).  On Route 87 (Fairmount/Walnut Hill), passengers will see far more frequent service with trips every 40 minutes as opposed to every 75 minutes.   RIPTA is also proposing adding the village of Manville to the Woonsocket Flex Zone (Route 281) and adding weekend service to the zone.

 

“We are excited about the proposed changes we are planning for Winter 2022 and we are looking forward to hearing feedback from the public,” said Greg Nordin, RIPTA’s Chief of Strategic Advancement.  “There are lots of improvements for passengers, whether it’s longer service hours on some routes, increased frequency, or better access to businesses and educational institutions.”  Nordin noted that RIPTA is still looking at the funding and staffing levels need to support the proposed changes and will be weighing public comment before the changes for January 2022 are finalized.  “Even if there are some changes that we are not able to put in place in January, they are all part of our long-range vision so they would likely be implemented in the future,” Nordin said.

 

For more details on the proposed changes, please visit https://www.ripta.com/Winter2022/.

 

The public hearing schedule is as follows:


Tuesday, October 12, 2021
URI Memorial Union
50 Lower College Road, Kingston, RI
Hearing times: 2pm - 4pm & 6pm – 8pm

Wednesday, October 13, 2021
Warwick City Hall
3275 Post Rd., Warwick, RI
Hearing times: 2pm - 4pm & 6pm – 8pm

Thursday, October 14, 2021
Woonsocket Public Library
303 Clinton St., Woonsocket, RI
Hearing times: 2pm - 4pm & 6pm – 8pm

 

TikTok faces a ban in the U.S. A Senate bill tied to a broader foreign aid package expected to clear the chamber tonight. The legislation would force TikTok's China-based parent company ByteDance to sell the app or face a ban from U.S. devices and networks.        FBI Director Christopher Wray is disputing Donald Trump's promise to investigate his political rivals. The former President has vowed to order the Department of Justice to investigate his opponents if he wins the 2024 election. On Tuesday, NBC News spoke with Wray, who said he wouldn't allow his agents to conduct any investigation that doesn't comply with the FBI's rules, procedures, best practices, or core values.       Pro-Palestinian protests are growing on college campuses around the country. Demonstrators at Columbia University say they want the Ivy League school to divest from companies they say profit from Israel's violations of international law and Palestinian rights. Police made arrests at Yale and New York University yesterday as some protests turned violent.        A nationwide search is underway for a former police officer accused of killing his ex-wife and underage girlfriend in Washington state. That's according to the New York Post. Elias Huizar is accused of killing his ex Amber Rodriguez at the elementary school where she worked on Monday and a second victim, identified as a 17-year-old he had been dating. The alleged murders took place on the same day Huizar was set to appear in court for allegedly raping two 16-year old girls.       The NBA Playoffs continue with three games tonight. First, the Phoenix Suns will take on the Timberwolves in Minnesota in game two of their series. The Timberwolves currently hold a one-to-nothing series lead. Then, the Indiana Pacers will take on the Milwaukee Bucks for game two. The Bucks lead that series one-game-to-zero. Lastly, the Dallas Mavericks will look to avoid going down two-games-to-none against the Clippers in Los Angeles in game two of their series.       A new Johnny Cash album is coming out more than two decades after his death. Universal Music is issuing "Songwriter," a collection of 11 previously unreleased demos the country legend recorded in 1993. According to "Variety," all of them are self-written originals by Johnny Cash.