INDIANAPOLIS — A new on-demand door-to-door public transit option launches next week in the Far Eastside neighborhood.
Driven 2 Success is a door-to-door transportation option that will bring people to essential services, including employment, health care, child care, education and others.
East Side resident and IndyGo rider Meron Gebreyohanes said he's excited for the service to start.
“It's a good thing. It's a really good thing for people who need help,” he said. “It'll put a big impact on people.”
The project was conceived by Indianapolis City-County Councillor La Keisha Jackson, who is also the executive director of Pathway Resource Center on the Far East Side. She said resources can be few and far between in the neighborhood but getting there can be another barrier for residents.
“One of the common threads on the Far Eastside was lack of food access, systemic poverty. What could I do to help remove that barrier? And transportation was always at the heart,” Jackson said.
Driven 2 Success will provide door-to-door transit service to people in the zip codes 46219, 46226, 46229 and 46235. It’s ADA accessible, family-friendly, and only $2 per ride. Veterans ride free for the first year.
Jackson said it opens public transit to people who can’t use other transit or rideshares.
“You have multiple grocery bags and you have a baby. Kinda hard to take the bus,” says Jackson.
The program also has a family counselor that can help riders connect to services in their communities. With every ride booked, riders can choose to have a counselor reach out to them.
“I don't know about you, but I would say that's life-changing. The independence of it all,” said Jackson.
There will be an Open House Saturday morning for residents to learn about Driven 2 Success, and the services it can access.
Residents will be able to buy vouchers and schedule rides. Food will be served. It will be from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Pathway Resource Center, 10119 John Marshall Dr.
-
Indy DPW drivers prepping for the 'snow fight' with 12-hour shifts
Indianapolis Department of Public Works is currently running twelve-hour rotating shifts. This is to keep up with multiple rounds of ice, snow, and cold temperatures.
Aging buildings force Martinsville School District to close four schools
In a statement, the school district said it is closing the schools because all four were built before the 1960s and are showing their age in both function and maintenance.
Indy churches holding Our Lady of Guadalupe celebrations despite ICE efforts
Indy churches are still planning to hold celebrations for the feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe despite growing fear from the Latino community amid ICE efforts
West Washington Street rehabilitation project brings major changes to area
Three separate crashes on Indianapolis' west side in less than two days have neighbors calling for action.