Half-Price Bus Fares, Carpool Incentives Available to Commuters as I-66 Construction Gets Underway

VDOT, local agencies provide alternatives to driving alone on I-66 during upcoming years of major construction
FAIRFAX, Va. – Half-price bus fares and expanded carpool, vanpool and telework incentives are available beginning this month for commuters and employers along the I-66 corridor through programs sponsored by the Virginia Department of Transportation and local partners as part of the Transform 66 Outside the Beltway project. The programs encourage northern Virginia residents and workers to find alternatives to driving alone on I-66 as construction accelerates on the 22.5-mile project corridor, which runs from I-495 to Route 29 near Gainesville.
“The construction to improve I-66 will make driving in the corridor more challenging for the next several years while work is underway,” said Susan Shaw, VDOT Megaprojects Director. “As part of the Transform 66 project, VDOT has partnered with local governments and transportation providers to help commuters and other travelers stay mobile using alternatives to driving alone on I-66 during peak periods when traffic is usually at its worst.”
The program options generally make existing alternatives less expensive or more convenient for travelers, and include:

Connector bus routes 
that operate on I-66 with service to the Vienna Metro. Click here to learn more about eligible bus routes and other Fairfax County commuter programs. Begins May 7, 2018.

New commuter bus service from Front Royal to Washington D.C., with stops tentatively planned at Rosslyn and Metro Center. Beginning June 2018.

Starting or joining a vanpool with other commuters traveling on I-66 is more affordable during construction. Significant financial support is available for people creating new vanpools on I-66, including a $200-per-seat subsidy and a $350 gas card incentive for operators of 10+ passenger vans. Learn more from Vanpool Alliance.

program provides technical advice, on-site assistance and financial incentives for employers interested in establishing a telework program. The Transform 66 project has boosted the financial incentive with a new subsidy of up to $10,000 for Northern Virginia employers within the greater I-66 corridor establishing a program that creates at least 10 new teleworkers.

Find additional program details and contact information on Transform66.org.
VDOT and its partners will promote the new programs across northern Virginia and the Washington, DC area through a broad range of channels, including fully-wrapped buses running on Connector and OmniRide routes beginning May 7, 2018. Varied outreach and education activities will run for the duration of the construction project and include community events, social media, a targeted paid media campaign and meetings with employers in the corridor.
The Transform 66 Outside the Beltway project will improve 22.5 miles of I-66 providing two express lanes alongside three regular lanes from I-495 to Route 29 in Gainesville in each direction, with dedicated express lane access points, and space in the median reserved for future transit. In addition, the project consists of 4,000 new park and ride spaces, new and expanded bus service throughout the corridor, safety and operational improvements at key interchanges, auxiliary lanes between interchanges, and bicycle and pedestrian upgrades.
The Transform 66 Outside the Beltway project is a public-private partnership between the Commonwealth of Virginia and I-66 Express Mobility Partners (I-66 EMP). I-66 EMP is a consortium of Cintra, Meridiam Infrastructure, John Laing Group Plc. and APG, and their design-build contractor, FAM Construction, LLC, a partnership between Ferrovial Agroman US and Allan Myers, VA. The express lanes project will reduce congestion, provide new and reliable travel choices, and greater connectivity to major destinations along the I-66 Corridor.
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