Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Pace (transit)

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Slogan
  
Connecting Communities

Executive Director
  
T.J. Ross

Headquarters
  
Arlington Heights

Founded
  
1983

Service types
  
Commuting, Paratransit

Locale
  
Northeastern Illinois

Website
  
www.pacebus.com

Motto
  
Connecting Communities

Routes
  
213

Pace (transit) wwwssceduwpcontentuploads201407PaceBusjpg

Fleet
  
701 buses 610 vans 366 owned vehicles in paratransit service 80 community vehicles

Service areas
  
Cook County, Illinois, Lake County, Illinois

Fuel types
  
Diesel fuel, Diesel-electric transmission, Compressed natural gas

Profiles

Pace is the suburban bus division of the Regional Transportation Authority in the Chicago metropolitan area. It was created in 1983 by the RTA Act, which established the formula that provides funding to the CTA, Metra, and Pace. In 2013, Pace had 39.925 million riders.

Contents

Pace's headquarters are in Arlington Heights, Illinois. Pace is governed by a 13-member Board of Directors, 12 of which are current and former suburban mayors, with the other being the Commissioner of the Chicago Mayor's Office for People with Disabilities, to represent the city's paratransit riders.

The six counties that Pace serves are Cook, Lake, Will, Kane, McHenry, and DuPage. Some of Pace's bus routes also go to Chicago and Indiana. In some areas, notably Evanston, River Forest, Oak Park, and Skokie, both Pace and the Chicago Transit Authority (CTA) provide service.

Many of Pace's route terminals are located at CTA rail stations and bus terminals and Metra stations. The CTA and Pace have shared a payment system since 2014 called Ventra. Ventra accounts are required to obtain transfers. Metra fares are completely separated, but a phone app is being developed that may allow Metra payment with Ventra.

Pace buses generally have longer routes than CTA buses. Due to its geographic service area, service is provided by nine operating divisions, as well as under agreements with several municipalities and private operators (school bus and motor coach companies).

All Pace buses are wheelchair accessible and have racks accommodating two bicycles, available during all hours of operation.

Pace buses provide service from the suburbs to various special events in the city, such as Routes 282 & 779 for Chicago Cubs games, Routes 773, 774 and 775 for Chicago White Sox games, Routes 237, 768, 769 and 776 for Chicago Bears games, Route 222 provides extra service to the Allstate Arena in Rosemont for events scheduled there, Route 284 to Six Flags Great America, Route 387 for events at Toyota Park in Bridgeview, and Route 238 for Northwestern University events at Ryan Field.

Pace is responsible for ADA paratransit service in its service area, and, effective July 1, 2006, for paratransit service in Chicago. Pace also coordinates various Dial-a-Ride projects, usually sponsored by various municipalities and townships. One of the largest is Ride DuPage, sponsored by Du Page County Human Services. Pace states that it is the nation's largest paratransit service provider, providing approximately 17,000 daily trips on paratransit, dial-a-ride and ADvAntage vanpools.

Pace operates a Vanpool Incentive Program, where groups save by commuting together in a van owned and maintained by Pace and driven by one of the participants. There is also a Municipal Vanpool Program, under which Pace provides a van to a municipality, for any public transportation purpose (such as demand response service for senior citizens).

Pace is not an acronym, but a marketing name.

In late 2011, Pace received its first Diesel-Electric Hybrid buses from Orion Bus Industries. These Orion VII 3G buses are the first buses in the Pace fleet to not be powered directly by diesel.

During weekday rush hours, Pace buses are authorized to use the Stevenson Expressway.

The majority of Pace bus routes run daily, morning through early to late evening. Other routes run Monday through Saturday, weekdays only, or weekday rush hours only. The Brookfield Zoo Express bus route runs on weekends during the summer. One route, 352 Halsted, runs 24 hours a day/7 days a week, four routes 390, 392, 395, and 890 run only for weekday UPS shifts.

Operating divisions

  • Fox Valley (North Aurora)
  • Heritage (Joliet)
  • North (Waukegan)
  • North Shore (Evanston)
  • Northwest (Des Plaines)
  • River (Elgin)
  • South (Markham)
  • Southwest (Bridgeview)
  • West (Melrose Park)
  • Municipal operators

  • Niles
  • Highland Park
  • Municipally supported shuttles and "trolley" services

  • Schaumburg
  • Other major facilities

  • South Holland Acceptance Facility
  • McHenry Paratransit Facility
  • Bus Fleet

  • Individual units in a series may be retired or out of service (also, a few units in a mostly retired series might still be operating).
  • No buses with fleet numbers ending in 13 (i.e. 6262-6322 consists of 60 buses, and there is no 6313).
  • Buses delivered in 2005 or later feature the new Pace logo. Starting in 2014, buses delivered in 2003, began receiving the current logo.
  • Some routes operated with paratransit or community vehicles.
  • References

    Pace (transit) Wikipedia