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Click to learn more about this service alert: I-70 Improvement Project Reroutes  Construction Detour Beginning Monday, February 9, until December of 2027, the 18 Indiana and 27 27th Street will reroute for the I-70 Improvement Project.

Click to learn more about this service alert: KCK Transit Services for World Cup  Additional Service Travel from KCK to World Cup festivities with expanded services: later IRIS service, extended service on 101, 102, 104, 107 and Legends Loop, and Connect KC26 shuttles.

Click to learn more about this service alert: FIFA Fan Fest Reroute  Detour Beginning Thursday, June 11, until July 13, RideKC buses 27, 85 and 201 will reroute for the FIFA Fan Fest.

Click to learn more about this service alert: Holmes Bridge Construction Reroutes  Construction Detour Due to the bridge construction at 14th and Holmes, the Troost MAX, 23 23rd Street, and 29 Blue Ridge Limited will reroute. This is expected to last until August 2026.

Click to learn more about this service alert: 18th Street Bridge Construction  Construction Detour Beginning Monday, March 3, until fall 2027 the 402 Johnson-Quivira, and the 118 8th Street will reroute for the 18th Street Bridge construction.

Click to learn more about this service alert: Troost MAX Reroutes for Bridge Construction  Construction Detour Beginning Monday, May 18, until September 15, the Troost MAX will rereoute for the U.S. 71 at Bannister Road for bridge replacement project.

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KCATA Awarded For Regional Leadership, Communications Excellence

Recognized for Excellence in Public Transit

(Kansas City, Mo. – August 27, 2015) The Kansas City Area Transportation Authority has collected four awards recognizing the agency for its efforts to improve regional transit, marketing public transportation and distinguished leadership.

For the first time, the Kansas Public Transportation Association (KPTA) tapped the KCATA as Transit Service of the Year for introducing the regional RideKC brand that will unify all four regional transit agencies together under one umbrella.

 Launched late last year, RideKC will unify fragmented transit services in the Kansas City region with a new look and logo for public transportation throughout the area. The RideKC initiative also will include a single regional website for riders seeking information about transit, regardless of where they live or their destination.

RideKC’s ultimate goal is to provide a unified transit system that’s seamless and easy to use for connecting people to opportunity.

The regional initiative was already highlighted by new agreements turning over management of the transit systems in Johnson County, Kan. and Independence, Mo. to the KCATA. Work also is under way to streamline the fare structure and simplify access to paratransit services across the Kansas City area.

The KPTA also gave its highest honor – the William M. Murry Award – to Chuck Ferguson, the KCATA’s chief planning officer.

Ferguson has been involved with public transit in the Kansas City area for more than 25 years, first starting at the KCATA in 1989. A couple years later, Ferguson  moved over to Johnson County where he helped grow the system into an award-winning suburban service.

Returning to the KCATA this year as the agency’s top planner, Ferguson is intimately involved in the efforts to build a seamless regional transit network. He served one unfulfilled term as president of the Kansas Public Transportation Association and was later elected president twice.

The KCATA’s communication and marketing efforts received national recognition when they won first-place awards handed out this month out by the American Public Transportation Association in the annual 2015 AdWheel competition.

The KCATA won first place for promoting a new compressed natural gas fueling station and a series of brochures explaining the bus system for prospective riders.

More than 10,000 of the colorful, glossy brochures were distributed in less than six months after they were published in 2014.

The AdWheel prizes are awarded for five main categories and are evaluated by industry peers, based on the following parameters: target audience, situation/challenge for creating the entry, strategy/objective of the entry and the results/impact of the entry. KCATA competed against transit systems between 4 million and 20 million riders per year for the award.

The KCATA will be officially honored for its work at the American Public Transportation Association’s annual meeting in San Francisco in October.

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