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SVT Vehicles in the Snow, Mt Si in the Background
By Dean Sydnor November 21, 2024
Regional Alliance for Reliable and Equitable Transportation (RARET) recommendations for Puget Sound mobility management.
By Laura Loe November 19, 2024
“Without transportation, local residents may skip health care” .
Two people holding a Find a Ride 2024 sign
By Laura Loe October 30, 2024
Committee members gathered to reflect on our Phase 1 trip planner accomplishments.
Path in the shape of an F with blue and orange colors
By Meg Cronister August 28, 2024
Funding Will Support Find a Ride’s Trip Planner Experience In June 2024, the U.S. Department of Transportation's Federal Transit Administration (FTA) announced the award of funds for a Washington State Department of Transportation (WSDOT) supported program. Find a Ride is a multi-phase One-Call/One-Click project under the supervision of the King County Mobility Coalition and Hopelink’s Mobility Management program. Find a Ride was awarded $519,496 through the FTA's Innovative Coordinated Access & Mobility (ICAM) Pilot Program , with the total funding for the second phase of the project close to $700,000 through regional match support. Hopelink submitted the Find a Ride grant application with matching support from WSDOT, King County Metro, Sound Transit, and Seattle Department of Transportation . With this award, the program will be able to invest in software to significantly improve the user experience for riders. Using a multi-phased approach, the Find a Ride trip planner tool will connect riders to specialized transportation services all in one centralized service, just one click or one call away from their destination. The tool is being developed through an inclusive planning process with input from regional transit providers and advocates from communities most impacted by transportation barriers, such as older adults and people with disabilities. Hopelink is very pleased to receive federal support for Find a Ride, our One-Call/One-Click project," said Susan Carter, Hopelink VP of Transportation "With the launch of our ground-breaking trip planner in March of 2024, we are excited to build on the momentum for Phase 2 of our project." The Federal Transit Administration (FTA) announcement included $7.8 million for 17 projects to improve public transportation for people with disabilities, older adults, and low-income individuals. The ICAM program supports the Biden-Harris Administration's commitment to improving public health, including mental health. Find a Ride received support from the State of Washington Health Care Authority, Congresswoman Suzan K. DelBene (WA-01), Puget Sound Regional Council, Shared-Use Mobility Center, Connect Snohomish County, Snoqualmie Valley Transportation, Pierce Transit, The Taskar Center for Accessible Technology at the Paul G. Allen School of Computer Science & Engineering, Volunteer Services – King County (A Program of Catholic Community Services), Aging and Disability Services, Arcadis, Center For Independence, City of Kirkland, Crisis Connections, Homage, Sound Generations, Indian American Community Services, King County Mobility Coalition, and Pierce County Human Services . Project administrators also received letters of support from dedicated project advisors, including several individuals with disabilities participating in the inclusive design of the project. Learn more about Find a Ride’s roadmap and inclusive planning process on our project website . Learn about the software development of Find a Ride’s innovative trip planner . Since 1971, the Hopelink has provided stability-building programs for people experiencing poverty, immigrants and refugees, and people with disabilities in north and east King County. The agency’s eleven programs work in tandem to fill gaps, supporting each family or individual’s unique needs. These include housing, food assistance, financial assistance, adult education, energy assistance, financial capabilities, family development, Dial-a-Ride Transit, non-emergency medical transportation, and mobility management. *** Read the full FTA announcement for more information. The full text is provided below: Biden-Harris Administration Announces $7.8 Million in Grants to Help Connect People to Health Care and Other Critical Services Thursday, June 6, 2024 The President's Bipartisan Infrastructure Law adds significant funding to transit pilot program WASHINGTON – The U.S. Department of Transportation's Federal Transit Administration (FTA) today announced $7.8 million for 17 projects that will improve public transportation for people with disabilities, older adults, and low-income individuals. The grants support organizations that coordinate public transportation for underserved groups, allowing them to access healthcare, community services, education, and jobs by building partnerships among health, transportation, and human services providers. FTA's Innovative Coordinated Access & Mobility (ICAM) Pilot Program – supported by more than $24 million in funding over five years from the President's Bipartisan Infrastructure Law – increases access for Americans all over the country, with a focus on health and wellness. Today's announcement supports transportation improvements, from designing new trip scheduling technology to buying transit vans, in 15 states. "Transportation is a lifeline that connects Americans to essential services, like health care, and today we're supporting innovative projects to help more people connect to the help they need" said U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg . "These transportation projects, made possible by President Biden's Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, will help people with disabilities, older adults, and low-income individuals access the health services they need." By improving the coordination of transportation to critical services for people who have been underserved in the past, the ICAM program supports the Biden-Harris Administration's commitment to improving public health, including mental health. The program provides an opportunity for older adults and people with disabilities and in low-income communities. "This program supports statewide and regional strategies to help ensure people who are especially challenged in accessing healthcare can reach those critical services,” said FTA Acting Administrator Veronica Vanterpool . "We are pleased to provide resources that help reach into the sometimes-overlooked areas of our nation to ensure no one is left behind." Some of the selected projects include: The Illinois Department of Transportation will receive $1.8 million to design and implement an integrated technology system for trip scheduling and fare collection that will facilitate non-emergency medical transportation trips and interagency passenger transfers. The program will integrate technology enhancements to improve mobility for people in 20 rural counties in southern Illinois through Shawnee Mass Transit, Rides Mass Transit, South Central Mass Transit, and Monroe Randolph Mass Transit. The Central Oklahoma Transportation and Parking Authority (EMBARK) will receive $415,900 to support the expansion of the existing coordinated transportation services through the purchase of two vehicles and associated vehicle technology systems. This project will meet the growing transportation demand for older adults, people with disabilities, low-income individuals, and transit-dependent populations with improved access to social services, education programs, workforce development programs, non-emergency medical treatment, and wellness and nutrition services throughout Oklahoma City. The West River Transit Authority (Prairie Hills Transit) in South Dakota will receive $269,280 to buy a contactless payment technology system that will enhance safety, improve reliability and the rider experience, and make transit more accessible to residents in the Black Hills region. A trip planning mobile app and website will help facilitate intercounty connections and regional service by linking riders with providers for trips across multiple service areas. The platform will improve coordination of services for veteran service organizations, education institutions, healthcare facilities, women’s and homeless shelters, home healthcare organizations, and workforce centers. In response to the Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO), FTA received 24 eligible proposals. Projects were selected based on criteria described in the NOFO .
Person sitting on bench looking at phone. We Help You Get Where You Need To Go.
By Laura Loe April 24, 2024
Recently, the Hopelink-based project helped make history. Throughout the last two years, Hopelink staff helped the Washington State Department of Transportation create almost two dozen new data feeds. Our work helped set a new data standard called GTFS-Flex. “Flex” is an extension project for GTFS (General Transit Feed Specification). The new data standard can tell the story of volunteer transportation, Non-Emergency Medical Transportation (NEMT), Dial-A-Ride, Door-to-Door, and other critical services.
By Tracie Jones April 1, 2024
2024 SVMC Mobility Resolution
By Laura Loe February 8, 2024
Celebrating Inclusion in Community!
People gathered at Pike Place Market with a banner that says White Cane Day
By Laura Loe October 24, 2023
A Celebration of Opportunity, Equality, and Independence!
By Julio Perez July 24, 2023
Cross-County Transportation Needs Between King and Snohomish Counties
By Laura Loe May 10, 2023
The Open the Paths 2023: An Open Data & Transportation Equity Conference brought together data professionals and academics with community members, transportation professionals, and organizations working to increase community mobility. There was a palatable and shared passion among every attendee and speaker around simplifying transportation in our communities. The technical focus on data specification standards was particularly relevant for a multi-year project Hopelink is working on, a One-Call/One-Click system , which will begin with the launch of a beta trip planner website in 2023. The TDEI (transportation data equity initiative) is a project led by the Taskar Center for Accessible Technology and Washington State Transportation Center (TRAC), sponsored by the ITS4US Program, US Department of Transportation. Led by Anat Caspi Ph D, the mini-conference had wide-ranging implications for mobility and accessibility in our communities. People with limited options make agonizing decisions for both necessary and joyful trips around their communities. The barriers for non-drivers include geographic, language, financial, cultural, time of day, lengthy planning ahead, and many other factors. Open the Paths 2023, located at the Paul G. Allen School of Computer Science building, focused on refining relevant data standards to improve mobility for people with disabilities and an analysis of other barriers to transit. Data quality and continuity ensures more comprehensive information in transit planning tools. Better data standards can help transit agencies and policymakers to identify and address gaps in our systems. Keynote speaker, Karen Braitmayer, FAIA, architect, and wheelchair user, emphasized that working towards better data standards is both “an art and a science.” The conference also made connections to community mental health. Braitmayer explained how barriers like tree routes, steep hills, and bumps on sidewalks may make people afraid to leave their homes. Crafting data standards which help tell the story of our built environments is an urgent problem to address. During Day 2, the conference focused on evaluation criteria for equity and access. Anat Caspi Ph D emphasized a need for less “squishy” criteria so transportation data can accurately reflect the experiences of multiply marginalized community members. The day ended with a synergetic community visioning conversation towards best practices in tagging community collected sidewalk data. Over the two days, April 21 and 22, attendees pondered thorny questions like: Are wheelchair users pedestrians? What is meant by ‘good’ and ‘bad’ data? How might researchers assess when community members feel left out due to a lack of abundant transit options? How reliable are crowd-sourced data? How might lack of maintenance of existing data sources undermine the data integrity of existing data sets? What are collectible data? Neuropsychologist Taylor Kuhn, Ph.D., presented on the Human Connectome Project and their work at the Institute for Transportation and Development Policy. This project “aims to provide an unparalleled compilation of neural data, an interface to graphically navigate this data, and the opportunity to achieve never before realized conclusions about the living human brain.” Learn more . Kuhn’s presentation demonstrated how Connectome modeling may predict future mode shift from single occupancy car travel due to congestion pricing. Community volunteers are often co-creators in the data for sidewalks. This creates unique challenges for creating data standards. For example, Braitmayer described significant challenges translating concepts like “sidewalk bumps” into a data description standard. Several attendees mentioned how disruptive it can be when a paratransit trip that is supposed to be door-to-door takes extra time due to inefficiencies. The conference highlighted projects in Minnesota, Chicago, and Seattle tackling mobility options that currently are not included in Google or Apple Maps. The collaboration fostered in the mini-conference ensures a more coordinated approach at the federal, state, and local levels. It reinforces the need for organizations rooted in the local community, like Hopelink, to be engaged in data creation and long-term continuous maintenance. At Hopelink, in connection with our partners in Pierce, King and Snohomish, we are helping set best practices for mobility management data projects in the Puget Sound Region that prioritize the needs of older adults and people with disabilities. Hopelink’s One-Call/One-Click system, Find a Ride, will begin a multi-year roadmap with the launch of a trip planner website in 2023. This work arose from an inclusive planning process with King County Mobility Coalition and other partners. Hopelink’s guiding principles for Find a Ride include eventual integration with Access Map sidewalk data which focuses on understanding and improving the pedestrian experience through better data collection. At first, Find a Ride will be trip planner with “call ahead” and “right now” service. Longer-term plans include integration with mobility options like taxi services, micro-mobility, and more. As of April 2023, there are twenty-six services complete and twenty-six services in progress in Find a Ride. We appreciate the thoughtful data feed creation with our partners at WSDOT. Our project is shaping an emerging data standard for specialized transportation providers. Find a Ride Program Manager, Laura Loe, reflected on the event: “Open the Paths 2023 demonstrated the need for lived experts to be involved from the beginning, and at every aspect of mobility management, something Hopelink has ensured with support from our Advisory Committee. Hopelink’s engagement and outreach, new community navigator program, and transportation resources phone line are all rooted in listening to non-drivers and connecting them to choices to increase their independence and community connection.” At Hopelink, our mobility programs benefit from robust community connections. Find a Ride’s trip planner will lead to gap assessments, a theme woven throughout Open the Paths 2023. Our project will help the Puget Sound Region right away while also leading to long-term improvements for those who have been left stranded by current systems. Analogous to the work on sidewalk data, it will take on-the-ground feedback to increase accuracy and meaning to our One-Call/ One-Click program.
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