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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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National Awards Honor KCATA For Safety and Security Efforts

Recognized for Excellence in Public Transit

(Kansas City, Mo. – May 16, 2016) The Kansas City Area Transportation Authority won top national honors this weekend for its efforts to bolster bus safety on the road and protect bus passengers and operators from assaults.

The American Public Transportation Association, the country’s top transit advocacy group, gave the KCATA both its Gold Award for Safety and its Gold Award for Security. The KCATA won the award in the category for transit agencies with between 4 million and 20 million annual passenger trips.

“We are honored that our work in safety and security has been recognized nationally,” said Robbie Makinen, the authority’s president and chief executive officer. “This award demonstrates the KCATA doesn’t just talk about safety and security – it acts. Safety and security are the KCATA’s top priorities.”

The KCATA won the safety award for a program phased in since 2013 that was aimed at reducing bus accidents. The program emphasized the five ‘Es:’ engineering, education, enforcement, encouragement and evaluation. Among other things, the KCATA fitted its bus fleet with accelerometers to better follow driving behaviors.

The authority also adopted new policies that toughened the possible consequences regarding cell phone use, distracted driving, and yielding to pedestrians at crosswalks.

As a result, the agency’s bus crash rate dropped in 2015, for the first time in 3 years.

The KCATA also won the public transportation’s association Gold Award for steps it’s taken to keep operators and riders safe on the bus system.

Earlier this year, the KCATA signed an agreement with the Kansas City Police Department to hire two full-time uniformed transit officers to complement 39 off-duty police officers who patrol the bus system. The full-time officers – who are in police uniforms and patrol cars – give the KCATA the ability to immediately respond to incidents whenever they arise, whether it’s on a bus, a transit stop or on agency property.

The authority established new rules imposing bans for passenger misconduct. The rules ban passengers for physical abuse of KCATA employees or customers, indecent exposure and disruptive behavior endangering the operation of the bus, among other factors. Six people have already been barred from the bus in Kansas City.

The KCATA also stresses safety training to avoid conflicts. Last year, the KCATA sent 460 operators through assault prevention and conflict-resolution training offered by Rutgers University’s National Training Institute. The KCATA was the first agency in the nation to take part in the training. The course helped drivers identify when they might be most vulnerable and how they can defuse an explosive situation with an angry passenger.

 

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