With too many passengers for the drivers on hand, the Metropolitan Council has launched a pilot program that lets Metro Mobility customers ride regular-route buses and light-rail trains at no cost.
Facing growing demand for Metro Mobility service, the Metropolitan Council will introduce fares beginning March 1 for essential health care workers who use the service. For a majority of the pandemic, ...
James Almen, of St. Paul, uses Metro Mobility to get to his doctor’s appointments at the Allina Clinic in Vadnais Heights. But when Almen, who is blind, tried to book a ride home from his 1:30 p.m.
Citing a growing demand for the service, the Metropolitan Council will no longer offer Metro Mobility rides free of charge for essential health care workers. The agency, which has offered the free ...
Metro Mobility will stop providing free rides to people working in Twin Cities-area health care facilities starting March 1, citing a need for space for paying customers who are returning to the ...
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