Manchester Transit Authority

Not to be confused with Transport for Greater Manchester.
Manchester Transit Authority
Founded 1973
Headquarters 110 Elm St, Manchester, NH
Locale Manchester, New Hampshire
Service area Greater Manchester, NH
Service type bus service, paratransit, express bus service
Routes 13
Destinations Greater Manchester, Concord & Nashua, NH
Hubs Veterans Park
Fleet Gillig 29' Low-Floor
Daily ridership 1,905 (2005)[1]
Chief executive Michael Whitten
Website mtabus.org

The Manchester Transit Authority, or MTA, is a public transportation provider in Manchester, New Hampshire, United States. It was founded in 1973 and operates 13 regular bus routes through the city, including a free downtown circulator, which was rebranded as the Green DASH (Downtown Area Shuttle) in 2011. In general, service is hourly, with more frequent service along corridors served by multiple routes, and especially on the Green DASH.

It is a hub and spoke system that meets downtown at Veterans Park (labeled as Center of NH on southbound departing lines) with one line departing from the nearby Canal Street Transportation Center.

Service is generally limited to the city of Manchester, with a few lines extending into the neighboring towns of Bedford, Goffstown, Hooksett and Londonderry, and two express lines running to Concord and Nashua. Since July 2013, the MTA has offered weekday service between Concord and Manchester-Boston Regional Airport, with most trips also stopping at the Center of NH hub in downtown Manchester, from 3:30 a.m. until 12:45 a.m.[2] The neighboring suburb of Bedford contributed funding to the MTA until 2010, and service coverage was significantly reduced within the town the following year. As of 2009, 97% of Manchester residents lived within one-quarter mile of an MTA bus line.[3]

The MTA is the public successor to Manchester's private bus service, which reached a peak annual ridership of 15.1 million in 1948, and the Manchester Street Railway that existed until 1940. The MTA was created by the City in May 1973, following requests by the private Manchester Transit bus provider for public subsidies.[4] As of 2005, the MTA served an average of 1,905 riders each weekday, though ridership has grown since that time despite budget cutbacks by the City and subsequent service cutbacks.[5] Ridership in 2011 had increased 21% over 2004, growing from 382,979 to 462,109 total rides. Service peaked for the decade in 2009 with 531,961 rides before falling as a result of service cuts in 2010 and recovering slightly in 2011. The general trend during the period, however, has been a growth in ridership.[6] In recent years, the MTA has sought to expand its ridership with new routes, such as the Green DASH and Concord Express, that are aimed at riders who might otherwise choose to drive.

In addition to the 13 public transit routes, the MTA operates a StepSaver paratransit service, two free Shopper Shuttle routes that operate three days a week, and pupil transportation for the Manchester School District.

Routes

Route Starting Point Terminus Operates Notes
1

Healthcare Shuttle/East Side Plaza

Veterans Park Operates as a loop via Elliot Hospital Weekdays Operates weekdays as counter-clockwise loop connecting East Side healthcare institutions
1S

Healthcare Shuttle/East Side Plaza

Veterans Park Operates as a loop via VA Medical Center & Bridge St Saturday Operates Saturdays as counter-clockwise loop through the city's northeast neighborhoods
2

Hanover St/E. Industrial Park

Veterans Park E. Industrial Park (Massabesic Circle even hours) Weekdays Ends at E. Industrial Park odd hours; continues to Massabesic Circle even hours
2S

Hanover St/E. Industrial Park

Veterans Park East Side Plaza via Elliot Hospital Saturday
3

Brown Ave/Airport

Canal St Transportation Center Manchester-Boston Regional Airport Monday-Saturday Service to Harvey Rd & Stonyfield weekdays only
4

Concord Express

Manchester-Boston Regional Airport Stickney Ave, Concord Weekdays Twelve round-trips daily between Concord & Manchester-Boston Regional Airport, eight of which stop at the Center of NH; service runs from 3:30 a.m. to 12:45 a.m.; requires day pass to ride
5

SNHU/River Rd

Veterans Park SNHU Monday–Saturday
6

Bremer St/Mast Rd

Veterans Park Shaw's, Pinardville via St. Anselm College Monday–Saturday Operates as a counter-clockwise loop through Manchester's West Side
7

Green DASH

Veterans Park Operates as a loop through downtown & Millyard Weekdays Service is free & frequent; operates as a figure-eight loop through downtown & Millyard via Spring St
8

South Willow St/Mall of NH

Center of NH Mall of NH Monday–Saturday
9

Nashua Express

Center of NH Nashua Mall, Nashua Weekdays Five trips daily; requires day pass to ride
10

Valley St/Mall of NH

Center of NH Mall of NH Monday-Saturday
11

Front St/Hacket Hill Rd

Veterans Park Wal-Mart, Hooksett Monday-Saturday
12

So. Beech St/Mall of NH

Center of NH Mall of NH Monday–Saturday
13

Bedford Grove Plaza/Second St

Veterans Park Wal-Mart, Bedford Monday-Saturday Service was cut in 2011 from Bedford Highlands to Bedford Grove following Bedford's decision to stop funding portion of MTA
Manchester Shopper Shuttle MTA (Elm & Gas St) Hannaford, East Side Plaza Mondays & Fridays Service is free
Hooksett Shopper Shuttle MTA (Elm & Gas St) Hannaford, Northside Plaza, Hooksett Thursdays Service is free

Circulators and Shopper Shuttles

Originally, the buses were wrapped with historical images of Manchester. In an effort to boost ridership and publicize the service, the downtown circulator was rebranded as the Green DASH in 2011, and the buses were given a new, green color scheme that no longer obscures the windows and clearly marks them as a free loop bus.[7] The free service is funded through a combination of federal grants and parking revenue. This marks the second attempt by the MTA at offering free transit downtown, following a fourteen-block free-ride zone that began in 1974 but has since been discontinued.[8]

References

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