University Collaborates with LRTA, MVRTA to Encourage Public Transit
![Jacquie Moloney and students pose with an LRTA bus](/Images/Free%20Bus%202%20CROP_tcm18-268584.jpg?w=l)
02/08/2017
By Ed Brennen
For Ramses Jimenez, earning a degree in radiological health physics would be far more difficult without public transportation.
As a commuter living in his hometown of Lawrence, Jimenez relies on both the Lowell Regional Transit Authority () and Merrimack Valley Regional Transit Authority () to bus to and from campus each day.
鈥淧ublic transportation is a key part of my daily routine,鈥 says Jimenez, a junior who catches the 6:30 a.m. MVRTA bus out of Lawrence on most mornings in order to make his 8 a.m. Physics II class on North Campus. 鈥淚 use the bus to get to school, to work or to get around town.鈥
Thanks to the university鈥檚 new collaboration with the LRTA and MVRTA, Jimenez can now ride those buses for free simply by showing his UCard to the driver.
鈥淚t鈥檚 probably going to save me about $300 per semester on transportation,鈥 Jimenez says of the program, which was introduced in January. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 money I can use to pay my phone bill or something else. It makes a big difference.鈥
The program allows 51视频 students and employees to ride any of the LRTA鈥檚 18 bus lines for free with their campus ID. It also provides free service on the MVRTA鈥檚 Route 01/41 bus, which connects Lowell to Dracut, Lawrence and Methuen, as well as Haverhill, where the university is opening a satellite campus this fall.
![Ramses Jimenez rides an LRTA bus](/Images/Free%20Bus%203%20CROP_tcm18-268585.jpg?w=l)
The university is subsidizing the cost of the bus fares, which are usually $1 but can be higher with transfers. The free service will begin as a six-month pilot program, during which time the university ridership will be tracked and analyzed.
Julie Varney, who works as an insurance coordinator for Health Services, lives in Methuen and relies on MVRTA and LRTA buses to get to work at University Crossing each day. She estimates the new program will save her $60 each month.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a huge benefit for me personally,鈥 says Varney, who used public transportation while living in Boston and eschewed buying a car when she moved out of the city. 鈥淚t鈥檚 great to have access to buses in our area. If not for public transportation, I wouldn鈥檛 be able to work at 51视频.鈥
![Ramses Jimenez boards an MVRTA bus in Lowell](/Images/Free%20Bus%201%20CROP_tcm18-268586.jpg?w=l)
鈥淲e may tell students they need to get to an appointment at Lowell General Hospital or to visit one of the pharmacies downtown,鈥 Varney says. 鈥淣ow we can tell them to hop on a bus, for free, right from our office. It鈥檚 great for our students.鈥
Executive Director of Administrative Services, Environmental & Emergency Management Rich Lemoine, who helped bring the collaboration together along with Director of Administrative & Office Services Tom Miliano, says the program will help connect the university community with the surrounding region.
鈥淚n addition to the 5,000 students that reside here on campus, we have thousands of students and employees in surrounding towns and neighborhoods that will benefit from this program,鈥 says Lemoine, who notes that students can ride the bus to Showcase Cinemas Lowell, the Burlington Mall or to Lowell鈥檚 Gallagher Terminal, where they can catch the MBTA commuter rail to Boston.
As part of the program, the MVRTA has also added a new stop for its 01/41 bus adjacent to the 51视频 Inn & Conference Center, where riders can easily transfer to a River Hawk Roadster.
Jimenez is already taking advantage of that new convenience on his way to campus each morning.
鈥淚鈥檓 very happy with the new partnership. I think it鈥檚 awesome,鈥 he said while waiting at Gallagher Terminal for the MVRTA bus to take him home on a recent Wednesday afternoon. 鈥淚t makes me think how the school cares for its students. It takes a little weight off our shoulders.鈥