Glossary

Common Terms & Concepts

Mobility

Mobility is the potential for movement of people and goods from one place to another, usually through one or modes of transportation. (via Modeshift)

Transportation Equity

Transportation equity is the goal of ensuring that all community members have their needs met by the transportation systems available to them. (via Harvard Kennedy School)

Complete Streets

Complete Streets is an approach to planning, designing, and building streets that enables safe access for all users, including pedestrians, bicyclists, motorists, and transit riders of all ages and abilities. (via Smart Growth America)

Complete Streets Policy

Cities, municipalities, or state Departments of Transportation can write their own Complete Streets policies, which can behold planners and designers that any future construction projects must uphold the practices outlined in the policy. However, these policies don’t have to be approved by the National Complete Streets Coalition, and not all Complete Streets Policies are created equal.

“15 minute city”

15-minute city is a planning concept that envisions a city wherein “within the distance of a 15-minute walk or bike ride, people should be able to access work, housing, food, health, education, culture, and leisure.” (via Congress for the New Urbanism)

The phrase was coined by Pantheon-Sorbonne professor, Carlos Moreno, in 2016, who describes the vision as, “within the distance of a 15-minute walk or bike ride, people should be able to access work, housing, food, health, education, culture and leisure.”

Last mile/last mile “solution”

The “last mile problem”, as it relates to transit, refers to the segment of a rider’s journey from the transit system to their final destination. 

The “last mile solution”, then, refers to the efforts made by planners to provide different modes of mobility for people to traverse their “last mile” with ease. This could include shuttles, smooth and accessible sidewalks, electric scooters, or e-bikes.

Open Streets

Open Streets is the concept of reclaiming streets that are normally occupied by cars and allowing people to congregate in that reclaimed space.

The Open Streets Project, is an advocacy project that provides resources for the planning, financing, marketing, and logistics of an Open Street Event.

    • Examples of Open Streets events in Columbus include the 2024 and 2023 Holiday Hop events in the Short North, the 2024, Short North Gallery Hop, the 2024 Cirque du Pearl in downtown, and 614 day in Franklinton. Columbus City Council approved funding for these events.

Local Programs & Projects

BikePlus

Bike Plus is a plan by the City of Columbus to create a safe, connected and comfortable network for people to bike, scooter, skate and roll in the city.”

Issue 47

Issue 47 was a sales tax levy that was passed on the November 2024 ballot. This levy increases the COTA sales tax from 0.5% to 1%. The revenue from the sales tax is for the implementation of the LinkUS plan.

LinkUS

The LinkUS plan is Central Ohio’s comprehensive transportation and development plan, which aims to provide:

  • 45% more COTA service over 2019 levels

  • New and improved sidewalks, bikeways, trails and crosswalks

  • Construction of COTA Bus Rapid Transit (BRT)  lines

    • Premium transit with more capacity than regular buses, dedicated lanes and signals to bypass traffic, higher frequencies, and zero emissions

    • Better rider experience with station improvements, including larger shelters, heated platforms, payment before boarding, shared bike and scooter options, and public art

  • More  COTA//Plus  zones for on-demand transit

3C+D Connector

The 3C+D Corridor refers to a proposal for an Amtrak route that will run between Cleveland, Columbus, Cincinnati, and Dayton. (Learn more via All Aboard Ohio)

Midwest Connect

The Midwest Connect corridor refers to a proposal for an Amtrak route that will run from Pittsburgh to Chicago via Columbus and Ft. Wayne, IN. (Learn more via All Aboard Ohio)

Types of Transportation

Bus rapid transit (BRT)

As defined by the Federal Transit Administration: Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) is a high-quality bus-based transit system that delivers fast and efficient service that may include dedicated lanes, busways, traffic signal priority, off-board fare collection, elevated platforms and enhanced stations.

Because BRT contains features similar to light rail transit, it is often considered more reliable, convenient and faster than regular bus services. With the right features, BRT is able to avoid the delays that can slow regular bus services, like being stuck in traffic and queuing to pay on board. 

Fixed Route Service (Bus)

This is what most people think of when they think of bus service. This is a service that transports the general public on a regular basis on vehicles that travel a designated route on a fixed schedule.

Flexible Route Service / On-Demand Service

This refers to more customizable or on-call services, usually supplemental within a larger transit system.

  • In Central Ohio, COTA//Plus is an example of flexible route service.

Light rail (LRT)

Light-rail Transit (LRT) is rapid transit that operates electric-powered single cars or short trains on fixed rails. Light refers to lighter passenger capacity, not the physical weight of the vehicles. Today’s LRT originates from traditional streetcar systems but is redesigned to run faster and carry more passengers over greater distances in a metropolitan area. (via Texas A&M Transportation Institute)

Monorail

Monorail is a term that is colloquially used to describe different types of rail systems. Simply, it is a railway that runs on a single rail or beam that may or may not be elevated. (via Wikipedia)

Heavy rail

Heavy rail (also called metro rail, subway, rapid transit, or rapid rail) is an electric railway on devoted rights-of-way that handles many passengers at once. Tracks may be placed in subway tunnels (like in New York City), on elevated structures (like in Chicago), or on fenced-off, ground-level tracks that do not cross roads. (via Texas A&M Transportation Institute)

Commuter rail

Commuter rail is a passenger train transit service that normally accommodates the longest-distance trips made within metropolitan regions during weekday peak travel periods at high overall average operating speeds, with relatively few station stops. The railway track is usually shared with intercity freight and passenger trains, and the commuter rail aims to bring people who live outside of the urban core into workplaces in the urban core.

Micromobility

Micromobility is a term describing the other forms of mobility that are not cars or public transit. This includes but is not limited to bikes, city-wide e-bike deployments and electric scooters.

COTA Service & Programs

COTA Bus Services

The Central Ohio Transit Authority (COTA) has several bus service types.

    • Standard

      • COTA Standard Bus Lines, denoted by a blue square, run throughout the day and have departure times between 15 and 60 minutes apart.

      • Standard Lines: 3,4,6,7,9,11,12,21,22,24,25,31,32,33,35,102,202

    • Frequent

      • COTA Frequent Standard Bus Lines, denoted by a red square, run throughout the day and have departure times every 15 minutes or less

      • Frequent Lines: 1,2,5,8,10,23,34,201

    • Rush Hour

      • Cota Rush Hour Bus Lines, denoted by a green square, run on weekdays, Monday-Friday, between 6:30AM-9:00AM and 3:00PM-6:00PM

      • Rush Hour Lines: 41,42,43,44,45,56,51,52,61,71,72,73,74,75

    • CMAX

      • CMAX is a rapid transit bus route that runs from downtown Columbus to the OhioHealth Westerville Medical Campus, primarily along High Street and Cleveland Avenue.

COTA Programs

    • COTA Plus

      • COTA//Plus is an on-demand transit service in 3 service zones: Grove City, Westerville, and South Side. COTA//Plus allows riders in the service to request affordable, on-demand rides within the COTA//Plus mobile app.

    • COTA Mainstream

      • Cota Mainstream is one of COTA’s flexible route services. Cota Mainstream offers origin-to-destination rides for people whose functional limitations prevent them from riding COTA’s fixed-route vehicles. COTA Mainstream has low-cost fare, and riders must meet eligibility criteria to utilize the service.