Skip to main content

Columbus renews C-Pass transit scheme

Initiative 'ensures equitable access to transportation', says Central Ohio Transit Authority
By Ben Spencer November 25, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
Cota C-pass programme has reduced car trips into downtown (© Paul Brady | Dreamstime.com)

The Central Ohio Transit Authority (Cota) is renewing a programme that offers unlimited free transit access to enrolled workers and residents in the city of Columbus until 31 December 2025. 

Cota is the regional public transit provider for greater Columbus and Central Ohio.

CEO Joanna M. Pinkerton says: “Renewing the C-pass programme ensures thousands of downtown employees will have equitable access to transportation to work for years to come.”

The C-pass programme stems from an agreement with the Capital Crossroads Special Improvement District (CCSID) and the Mid-Ohio Regional Planning Commission.

Marc Conte, acting executive director for CCSID, says: “Downtown C-pass has proven to be a successful programme that reduces car trips into downtown and eases the scarcity of parking."

"This supports our property owners’ efforts to lease more space while providing employers with a valuable recruitment and retention tool.”

Cota says more than 450 downtown organisations have enrolled more than 15,000 employees and residents since the programme launched in June 2018. 

C-Pass has more than doubled the ridership of the downtown workforce, the transit authority adds. 

Currently, Cota fares are temporarily suspended. C-Pass will automatically be reactivated for all enrolled workers when fares are reinstated. 

In the wake of Covid-19, Cota has made face masks mandatory for all customers and operators.

It says it also sanitises all transit vehicles three to five times a day, treats all surfaces with an antibacterial solution and has doubled the sanitisation of 118 transit shelters. 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Reflecting on five years of important ITS progress
    January 7, 2013
    Former head of the ITS Joint Program Office Shelley Row has passed the baton to a new director. Now working as an independent consultant, here she reflects on her five years at the helm of the JPO and what the future may hold for ITS in the US. During a mid-morning in Paris earlier this year, having just landed, I decided to take a trip on the city’s subway (Paris’ underground metro) into the city centre. A family with a small boy – about nine years old – boarded the same train. They were American and we st
  • Telent and Cisco to set up Greater Manchester One Network
    December 18, 2023
    Traffic control signals will benefit from faster and more resilient data connections
  • Wireless technology aids workzone communications
    June 7, 2012
    Need for a temporary communication fix during a construction project has led to rapid deployment of a permanent but simplistic wireless broadband network in Chandler, Arizona When a major construction project was expected to disrupt highway communications in the city of Chandler, Arizona, the city’s engineers went looking for a simple solution. They needed a way of maintaining data connections with three consecutive intersections along Arizona Avenue in Chandler while construction necessitated the severin
  • MaaS by any other name
    February 6, 2020
    Has the roll-out of Mobility as a Service stalled - or could it just be that multimodal travel is simply happening under a variety of different names?