- Advertisement -
  • Most Commentedmost commented up
  • Most Emailedmost emailed up
  • Popularmost popular up

Cortland


Residential
3 bedroom, 1 bath
$51000


Columbiana


Commercial
bedroom, bath
$1850000


- Advertisement -
 

« News Home

Trumbull voters face 5-year transit levy


Published: Thu, August 4, 2011 @ 12:06 a.m.

Staff report

WARREN

Trumbull County commissioners voted 3-0 Wednesday to place a 0.5-mill, five-year levy on the Nov. 8 ballot to fund a county transportation service.

The service would replace Niles Trumbull Transit, a transportation service the city of Niles started in 2001 and that grew larger with infusion of money from the Trumbull County senior- services levy.

The city announced early this year it would no longer operate Niles Trumbull Transit effective Jan. 1, 2012.

Commissioner Paul Heltzel said commissioners are now ready to hear from any Trumbull County resident interested in becoming a member of the seven-member transit board, which will run the service.

The phone number for county commissioners is 330-675-2451.

No more than four members of the board can be members of the same political party.

The levy, which would raise $1.7 million a year, would cost the owner of a $100,000 home $17.50 per year, said Adrian Biviano, Trumbull County auditor.

Niles-Trumbull Transit provides rides to senior citizens, people with disabilities and children age 2 to 12 for $1.50 per one-way trip for residents of Niles, Howland, Liberty, McDonald, Cortland, Warren, Girard, Lordstown, Hubbard Township, Bazetta Township, and Weathersfield Township. Those communities pay Niles-Trumbull Transit a membership fee, but the membership fee would be eliminated if the levy is approved.

A ride costs $2 for a senior-citizen in nonmember communities, and the cost can be as high as $8 per ride for other riders.

Heltzel has said the $635,000 in senior-levy money the commissioners awarded to Niles Trumbull Transit for senior citizen rides in 2011 will be used to create the new transit service regardless of whether the levy is approved.

But Tom Harwood, a former member of the Senior Services Advisory Committee, said the new transit service would be unable to survive on $635,000.


Comments

1RightofLeft(21 comments)posted 9 months, 3 weeks ago

IS THIS LEGAL? The Senior Levy was passed for services only to senior citizens. Now the Commissioners are going to steal the money to finance a public transportation system. That might be OK if the system transported only senior citizens but this is called a public tranportation system so I assume anyone could ride. If public officials can pass a levy for one reason and then steal the money for another purpose, why would anyone ever vote for any levy in the future? How do we know that this new levy won't be used for some other purpose that we don't want and the Commissioners are saying it's for transportation just to get it passed? I for one just don't trust them.

Suggest removal:


News
Opinion
Entertainment
Sports
Marketplace
Classifieds
Records
Discussions
Community
Help
Forms
Neighbors

HomeTerms of UsePrivacy StatementAdvertiseStaff DirectoryHelp
© 2012 Vindy.com. All rights reserved. A service of The Vindicator.
107 Vindicator Square. Youngstown, OH 44503

Phone Main: 330.747.1471 • Interactive Advertising: 330.740.2955 • Classified Advertising: 330.746.6565
Sponsored Links: