Starting next year, the Regional District of Nanaimo will be adding bus service to the Duke Point ferry terminal in Nanaimo. BLACK PRESS file

Starting next year, the Regional District of Nanaimo will be adding bus service to the Duke Point ferry terminal in Nanaimo. BLACK PRESS file

Bus service being planned for Duke Point for 2018

Proposed 5,000 expansion transit hours to provide riders access to five ferry sailings each day

  • Sep. 19, 2017 7:00 p.m.

RDN Transit is planning to extend bus service to the B.C. Ferries ferry terminal at Duke Point starting in January.

The objective is to provide a public transportation option for ferry foot passengers and residents, as well as employees working in businesses in the area.

A 5,000-hour annual expansion has been recommended by Regional District of Nanaimo Transit to the Duke Point area, which would ensure services from 6 a.m. to 8 p.m., providing bus riders access to five ferry sailings each day.

In 1997, the regional district transit conducted a three-month trial for public transit to the Duke Point ferry terminal. It was discontinued due to low ridership. However, RDN staff indicated that it takes at least three years of stable transit service along a route to build up ridership and make it viable.

RDN Transit has taken this latest initiative following requests from the public, ferry passengers and the major employer in the area, the Tilray medical marijuana producer, which employs 170 full-time employees and has a goal of adding 20 to 30 employees next year. Following discussions with Tilray, B.C. Ferries and the Nanaimo Chamber of Commerce, and based on the feedback from the 2014 Transit Future Plan, the feasibility and costs of public transit in the Duke Point area were explored.

In the first year of the service, the estimated ridership for a ferry shuttle route to Duke Point ferry terminal and industrial area could start at around 10 passengers per trip.

Superintendent of transit planning and scheduling, Erica Beauchamp, in her report to the transit select committee on Sept. 14, indicated ridership is expected to increase over the next three years as more travellers learn about the service and realize public transit as a viable, sustainable and cost-effective means of travel to and from the Duke Point area.

The public transit service to Duke Point Terminal is one of the medium-range service improvements in the RDN’s 2014 Transit Future Plan.

Cost for the 5,000-hour expansion is estimated at $427,355, based on 2017 budgets. However, costs will vary depending on a number of items, including fuel prices.

The RDN board will still have to approve the RDN Transit recommendation.

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Nanaimo News Bulletin