Nashville Mayor Freddie O’Connell Shares New Bus Lines Proposed in Transit Referendum

Freddie O'Connell

Nashville Mayor Freddie O’Connell on Thursday provided details of how his proposed transit referendum would expand lines and services for the city’s bus system.

O’Connell posted the details to the social media platform X, where he wrote the bus transit improvements are “a key element” of his referendum. The mayor confirmed, “We’ll have local, frequent, new, and express service updates.”

The plans posted by the mayor suggest a number of new bus lines that will operate daily, from 4:30 a.m. until midnight, with buses running every 30 minutes.

O’Connell also seeks to modify some lines to run continuously without breaking at midnight. During peak hours, O’Connell would see these lines of buses run every 15 minutes and every 20 minutes in the evening, with buses running every 30 minutes overnight. O’Connell’s plans also include multiple express routes for bus passengers.

“We’ll be able to expand jobs access, childcare access, grocery access and generally lower the cost of household transportation for tens of thousands of families across the city,” argued O’Connell.

The mayor added, “If you’re not a regular rider, you’ll still have an easier time accessing special events.”

O’Connell plans to reveal the full details of his transit referendum next Friday.

So far, the mayor has also confirmed it includes plans for 600 modern traffic signals, 83 miles of new sidewalks, and new continuous bus lines with stops in Murfreesboro, Gallatin, Dickerson, and Nolensville.

However, the mayor’s desire to include traffic signals and sidewalks in the referendum could be illegal under the 2017 IMPROVE Act, according to Nashville Tea Party founder Ben Cunningham, who made the remarks during his Tuesday appearance on The Michael Patrick Leahy Show.

Cunningham told Leahy, the editor-in-chief of The Tennessee Star, that the law was created to give Tennessee’s four largest cities an “opportunity to increase taxes through a voter referendum for a mass transit system.”

He explained, “What [O’Connell’s] doing is taking those elements, putting them into this IMPROVE Act referendum and the IMPROVE Act was never meant to include those elements.”

Cunningham, who previously described O’Connell’s transit referendum as a “greendoggle,” said the law stipulates O’Connell is only allowed to raise taxes for “mass transit: buses, trains,” or other forms of locomotion defined as “shared transport.”

The watchdog has warned that federal transportation funding is set to expire, leaving the sales tax increase insufficient to pay for O’Connell’s plans. Should that happen, Cunningham predicted the Metro Nashville Council would make up the difference with property tax increases.

Should Nashville voters approve the tax increase requested by O’Connell, the top sales tax paid by consumers in the city would be 10.25 percent.

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Tom Pappert is the lead reporter for The Tennessee Star, and also reports for The Georgia Star News, The Virginia Star, and the Arizona Sun Times. Follow Tom on X/Twitter. Email tips to [email protected].
Photo “Freddie O’Connell” by Freddie O’Connell. Background Photo “Proposed Bus Route” by Freddie O’Connell.

 

 

 

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6 Thoughts to “Nashville Mayor Freddie O’Connell Shares New Bus Lines Proposed in Transit Referendum”

  1. Nashville Deplorable

    Have you ever seen the MTA bathroom downtown? Yuck!

  2. Nashville native

    Freddie’s new bus plans are pathetic.

    There are still no westside cross-town buses (so you could go from Charlotte to Green Hills Mall to Nolensville Rd to Donelson). For convenience, the bus routes should form rings or wheels around the city, and have the spokes go directly down and across town with stops at major public areas.

    We need more secondary street buses like the old route down Murphy Rd/46th hooking up Charlotte and West End.

    Finally, to really help our traffic mess, extend the routes to the Metro outskirts at major drive- time for commuters who want to park and ride the bus.

    People will take buses if they don’t have to walk a mile(s) and the buses run at convenient times. I did when I lived in NYC and it was too expensive to own and operate and park a car.

  3. This proposal will do nothing to alleviate traffic congestion in Nashville and in fact we’ll probably make it worse since you’ll have dedicated bus lines which will take up a current traffic lanes going both ways down the major thoroughfares. This mayor believes because he lived off public transportation. Everybody else should have to and it’s not viable since you have to walk in some cases a mile to this get to the bus station on a major route. Why should my tax dollars make it more convenient for those who made bad life choices. Nashville is not New York City, nor do we ever want to become New York City.

  4. Truthy McTruthFace

    more empty buses funded by increased taxes, great.

  5. Great! Now you, too, can become a moving target, 24/7.

  6. Stent

    Find someone who loves you the way liberals love trains and buses.

    In my too many years in Nashville, I have never-not-once seen a bus half full or even remotely close to capacity. Usually just a couple or no more then a few riding solemnly in that rolling roadblock and traffic artery blockage known as a WeGo bus causes gridlock wherever it wanders.

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