City Council seeking chamber support for weekend trolleys
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Barbara Diamond
Mayor Cheryl Kinsman and Councilwoman Toni Iseman formed a rare
partnership Tuesday.
They will seek to enlist the Chamber of Commerce in an effort to
make the free weekend tram service a success.
“I want to ask the chamber about getting Downtown employees to
park at Act V and use the trolleys,” Iseman said.
Downtown employee parking has been seen as a major impediment to
freeing up parking spaces for residents and visitors.
“I have been pushing for this for years, but I thought this was
premature,” longtime resident Carolyn Wood said.
Wood would have preferred some studies about users and their
destinations before the service began.
The service began Labor Day weekend, including Monday, and will
continue through the end of June when the festival season begins and
the regular tram program starts.
Funding for the program comes from two Orange County
Transportation Authority grants, approved two years ago. The first
grant was used to buy an additional bus to reduce the waiting time
between trams on the highway. The total cost of the free shuttle is
$50,000, of which the city pays between $6,000 and $7,000.
Trams stop at Act V, where parking is free, Ocean Avenue across
from the Bank of America, Broadway at the highway and Broadway at the
Bus Depot. Trams use the existing festival stop in front of the depot
to avoid confusion with passengers waiting for OCTA buses or the
city’s mainline service on Saturdays. There is no mainline service on
Sundays or holidays.
Kinsman would like a study also on possibly using trams on the
weekdays in place of buses.
“People like to ride the trams rather than the buses,” she said.
Two trams or buses make the weekend shuttle circuit, taking about
20 minutes depending on weather and traffic. Service runs from 9 a.m.
to 6 p.m.
Iseman would like to see the service extended maybe another hour
or so, even if it means starting later. Most Downtown stores don’t
close until 6 p.m. or even later, and employees don’t leave on the
dot, making it unlikely they could use the trams even if they were so
inclined.
Iseman and Kinsman hope to persuade chamber officials to use their
influence on business owners to induce their employees to use Act V
on the weekends, freeing up spaces for residents and tourists.
“We need to ask them what we can do to make this work for them,”
Councilwoman Elizabeth Pearson said.
Pearson will meet with hospitality industry representatives to
encourage hotel and restaurant owners and operators to participate.
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