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King County Metro to restore trips on six bus routes

Graphic with text on orange photo: Bus icons with text that reads Restored trips on six bus routes starting June 26; 208, 225, 226, 241, 250, 255

In support of the region’s ongoing recovery and to serve riders better, King County Metro will restore and revise bus trips on six bus routes starting Saturday, June 26.

Metro currently operates more than 85% of its pre-pandemic bus service, providing about 11,000 bus trips carrying 150,000 riders each day. Further revisions and restored service are planned this fall across King County—including an additional 200,000 restored service hours as part of the Oct. 2 service change.

The added trips on weekdays and Saturdays will give riders access to more frequent bus service and provide service earlier in the morning and later in the evening.

“With vaccination rates reaching 70 percent and climbing, we want to expand travel options as quickly and safely as possible,” said King County Executive Dow Constantine. “Adding trips on these Eastside routes delivers service to diverse areas, and connects people to jobs, education, and all this region has to offer.”

Service details are available in online timetables, Metro’s trip planner and downstream real-time apps.

“During the past year we have adapted to provide bus service where it is needed most,” said King County Metro General Manager Terry White. “By adding more than 150 bus trips a week, we are making targeted improvements in key parts of King County while also maintaining frequent service on workhorse routes in south Seattle and south King County. We continue to welcome more and more riders back to safe and reliable transit service as the region recovers.”

Routes and service improvements

The six routes that will have more trips after June 26 are currently operating at reduced levels and already were slated for more service this fall. The routes were selected for restored service based on an opportunity score, which evaluated where bus stops are located in equity priority areas, as well as a jobs equity score, which evaluated how well a route connects priority populations to jobs.

Metro is able to shift buses to these routes after relaxing passenger limits across the system in April, which in turn reduced the need to operate as many supplemental backup buses on some routes.

On Oct. 2, Metro plans to restore a number of suspended routes across King County and further ramp service up in response to rider input and to support expected growth in ridership demand. Metro also plans to implement route changes and improvements to connect riders with three new Link light rail stations in Seattle on the One Line.

Masks remain required on transit under federal law, even though King County’s mask mandate expires on June 29. Metro remains committed to its other health enhancements, too, including daily disinfecting, upgraded air filters, and encouraging contact-less payment. These steps, and county-wide vaccination rates that lead the nation, show that riding transit remains a safe, convenient, and environmentally responsible way for people to travel.

Service improvement details

Route 208 Weekday

Route 225 Weekday

Route 250 Weekday

Route 255 Weekday

Route 226 Saturday

Route 241 Saturday

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