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Free Transit Cut Emissions By Over 25,000 TONS

Iowa City eliminated bus fares in August 2023 with a goal of lowering car emissions and encouraging public transit, and the two year pilot program proved so wildly popular that the City Council voted this summer to extend it another year, paying for it with a 1 percent increase in utility taxes and by doubling most parking rates from $1 to $2. The results have been nothing short of remarkable: ridership has surpassed pre-pandemic levels by 18 percent, people drove 1.8 million fewer miles on city streets, and emissions dropped by 24,000 metric tons of carbon dioxide annually, the equivalent of taking 5,200 vehicles off the roads. Bus drivers say they’re navigating less congested streets, and on time arrivals have increased by 13 percent because no one is delaying things by rummaging for money at the fare box.

The program has transformed daily life for residents like Vincent Hiser, 71, who used to pay $31 a month for bus passes, and Abbas Mahadi, 20, who said free transit is essential for his family and “if you didn’t have free buses, it would be too much for us.” Downtown businesses supported the change because free buses help bring people downtown and decrease workers’ transit costs, with the city’s transportation director noting that “the transit system is one of the greatest tools communities have to combat climate change and reduce emissions.” The city threw a launch party when fares were eliminated, with artists decorating bus shelters with decals of butterflies, bees, and wind turbines while jazz bands played on downtown sidewalks and people wrote thank you cards to bus drivers. Early concerns that fare free travel would draw problematic behavior never materialized, and drivers say not having to collect payment has actually led to less friction with riders, while students like 21 year old Abby Kloha appreciate being able to study Japanese vocabulary during their commute instead of stressing behind the wheel, proving that sometimes the simplest solutions, making something essential completely free, can create the most profound changes in how a community moves, breathes, and thrives.

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