Marvetta Rutherford鈥檚 bus won鈥檛 get her close enough to her temp job tonight.
So after a five minute wait 鈥 the #15 bus is late to her stop in the Union-Miles neighborhood 鈥 and a 20-minute ride, the 63-year-old grandmother must hoof it the extra 30 minutes on a hot Friday afternoon through downtown Cleveland. She鈥檚 headed to FirstEnergy Stadium, where she鈥檚 working food service for a local high school鈥檚 prom.
鈥淚f you work at the Browns stadium, this is what you have to do, if you don鈥檛 catch a rideshare or whatever,鈥 said Rutherford, a member of the citizen advocacy group (CPT). 鈥淭here is no bus that takes you there.鈥
There is a Blue Line rail stop near the stadium, but it鈥檚 been closed since fall 2020. Rutherford walked past a sign on the glass door informing riders the stop will be up and running again in 鈥渟pring 2021.鈥
Northeast Ohio residents鈥 ability to get to work by public transit has been in the spotlight in recent years, with the s (GCRTA) , implemented in June 2021, attempting to improve service frequency and job access. Also, to specifically address the issue, the granted $1 million in funding from its Paradox Prize to local agencies.
This attention is warranted but has yet to lead to meaningful change, Rutherford and other transit advocates say. Funding cuts in recent years combined with deferred maintenance and outmigration of the population have hurt the system to the point that remapping, while it has helped address transit issues in some neighborhoods, is not enough, they say.
Delays and deferred maintenance
The sprawl is real. found that the Cleveland metropolitan area experienced the largest drop in the number of jobs located near the average resident from 2000 to 2012 among the 96 largest metropolitan areas in the U.S.
And a outlined that half of Northeast Ohio鈥檚 top 10 employment centers 鈥 geographical areas where jobs are clustered 鈥 had access to 15% or less of the regional workforce. That study also found that jobs were least accessible for workers with only a high school degree, in positions that paid less than $1,250 per month.

Rutherford doesn鈥檛 have a car and relies on public transit to get her to temporary jobs, often in downtown Cleveland or on the East Side. She said it鈥檚 hard to find a route that can get her to those jobs within 45 minutes. Plus, she has arthritis in her legs and hips, so it鈥檚 not an easy journey when she has to walk a lot.
鈥淵ou鈥檙e not going to be able to do that鈥 if you鈥檙e going from here (Union-Miles) downtown, if you鈥檝e got to make a connection, if you鈥檝e got to go to an industrial park, or God forbid, if it鈥檚 what they think is non-peak hours,鈥 she said
Chris Stocking, a near West Side resident and member of CPT, used to take the Red Line train to get to his workplace on the East Side. But he鈥檚 stopped relying on it because of too many delays and breakdowns. From what he鈥檚 witnessed, the railcars are far beyond their useful life, and often need maintenance or have malfunctions鈥搃ncluding motors smoking, which means the entire railcar must be evacuated and riders must wait for a replacement.
鈥淚f the train is delayed 10 minutes, now I have to wait half an hour for my next connection,鈥 he said. 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 have maintenance and broken rail cars all the time and expect people to take it because it鈥檚 just not reliable.鈥
Joe Freilich, GCRTA鈥檚 director of service management, calls Red Line service reliability 鈥渟till pretty good鈥 but acknowledges 鈥渢hat if we keep using these Red Line cars for another 10 years, our service reliability would be very poor, so as a result we have a big effort underway right now to replace every Red Line car we own.鈥.
Lynn Nilgess, 64, also lives on the near West Side and commutes to her job at the Cleveland Museum of Art as a security guard. She can either use the bus, with two transfers, or walk 15-20 minutes to a Red Line station. Either way, it takes about an hour for her to get to work and another hour to get home. The delays on the Red Line also don鈥檛 help.
鈥淕enerally what鈥檚 been happening is it goes out over the weekend, so that鈥檚 when I鈥檓 working, so that makes it hard,鈥 she said.
And thanks to spotty weekend service, 鈥渟ome days, if I take the bus and I manage to get downtown, there鈥檚 a chance I could have to stand and wait an hour鈥 for the second bus, she said.
NextGen opportunities
In the planning leading up to the NextGen redesign, riders identified easier connections to work as a necessity, Freilich said.
The system redesign has resulted in significant improvements to service frequency in many parts of the Greater Cleveland area, he added 鈥 and with it, improved job access for many. He said the number of jobs located within a half-mile of a frequent service line 鈥 defined as a bus or train that arrives every 15 minutes 鈥 increased by 25% due to that redesign. And the number of residents who live within a half-mile of one of those frequent service lines 鈥渄oubled.鈥
鈥淭hat not only helps you get to work, it helps you get to absolutely everything else you might need to do,鈥 Freilich said.
The redesign also improved the frequency of GCRTA鈥檚 transit options during the weekend and evenings too, recognizing that not everyone works a typical 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday-through-Friday schedule, Freilich said.
Even before the redesign, the Federal Reserve report mentioned earlier found some additional positives with the GCRTA鈥檚 services. The Cleveland metropolitan area in 2015 ranked above average in terms of transit coverage, and was in the top 20 of all metropolitan areas in the country for service frequency both in the city and its suburbs, the report explained.
And a $6 million project is underway to stabilize the bridge that supports the Blue Line鈥檚 waterfront line that advocate Rutherford was unable to use, set for completion in 2023, according to GCRTA spokesperson Robert Fleig.
In addition, GCRTA has enough funding to replace the Red Line railcars at least, and is currently seeking proposals from manufacturers to do so. The entire project to replace the GCRTA鈥檚 aging fleet of railcars is set to cost $300 million, one of the most expensive projects in the system鈥檚 history, and will replace 40 heavy and 34 light rail vehicles that are almost 40 years old, exceeding their design life, Fleig said.
What else can be done?
Robert Pfaff, visiting assistant professor in the Department of Urban Studies at Cleveland State University, studies public transportation.
He said replacing vehicles and improving transit infrastructure can be expensive, and argued that greater investment is needed in public transit in order to make it more convenient, which would then encourage ridership. Cleveland鈥檚 ridership rate is less than 5%, Pfaff said, with more well-developed public transit systems where car use is disincentivized, like New York City and Washington D.C.
鈥淎 good city plans this comprehensively 鈥 and works to expand dense zoning, with funding for public transit, as well as other pedestrian/biking facilities,鈥 Pfaff said.
Pfaff added that major metropolitan areas like Cleveland are contending with decades of development patterns and policies meant to create more-rapid movement of cars through cities, often at the expense of pedestrian, bicycle and public transit.
CPT鈥檚 Chris Stocking observed that fare revenue only makes up about 15% of the GCRTA鈥檚 budget 鈥 and ridership overall has been down during the pandemic鈥搒o funding would likely need to come from other sources. He suggested a tax levy paired with reduced fares鈥揻ares have doubled in the past 15 years while service was reduced. Stocking said GCRTA has never been to the ballot box to seek such funding since its creation in 1975. GCRTA spokesperson Natoya Walker-Minor said her agency is 鈥渘ot considering a tax levy,鈥 although the GCRTA鈥檚 board president said in a 2018 statement that they would consider putting one on the ballot .
A good city plans this comprehensively 鈥 and works to expand dense zoning, with funding for public transit, as well as other pedestrian/biking facilities.Robert Pfaff, Department of Urban Studies at Cleveland State University
Increased funding could pay for a host of other service improvements to coax riders back. Stocking and other CPT members said communication problems are another matter, however. The GCRTA discontinued text alerts to people鈥檚 phones about service disruptions in 2017, and currently relies on a cellphone application; Stocking said adding back texts would help those without cell phones or data.
The GCRTA at one time also had digital display signs posted near busy stops, but they displayed inaccurate information, Stocking said. Most of those signs have been removed due to problems with the vendor, Freilich said.
鈥淲e are interested in expanding that, funding permitted,鈥 Freilich said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e also working to improve the underlying data because鈥 if it鈥檚 wrong on the cellphone then it鈥檒l also be wrong on any fixed and installed sign.鈥
There are other small touches that could help encourage more ridership, too. Nilgess, the art museum employee, said the addition of a restroom and somebody cleaning things up more frequently over at the West Boulevard Red Line station would help make it more welcoming.
鈥淲hen I get on the elevator I have to walk through puddles of urine,鈥 she said. 鈥...and I have had to walk past piles of feces.鈥
One of the big issues facing the GCRTA is urban sprawl, with decent-paying jobs increasingly being located farther outside of more frequent-service bus lines. Freilich said it will take employers, local governments and the GCRTA working together to improve that issue, whether it be employers creating shorter access roads to factories or cities sharing some of the cost of creating a new bus stop.
鈥淚t鈥檚 helpful for them to think about how workers will come to work if they are using a bus,鈥 Freilich said.
This story is a part of the鈥檚 Making Ends Meet project. NEO SoJo is composed of 18-plus Northeast Ohio news outlets including 91制片厂. Conor Morris is a corps member with . Email him at cmorris40@gmail.com