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DC Circulator fares restart Oct. 1

The free ride’s over, folks.

The District Department of Transportation said Friday that DC Circulator fares will be reinstated Oct. 1.

DC Circulator fares were suspended through Sept. 30, due to the coronavirus pandemic.

Mayor Muriel Bowser set aside $6.5 million in funding for free DC Circulator service in her fiscal year 2022 budget proposal, according to a DDOT email. But the D.C. Council decided fares should be reinstated.

At least it’s only $1.

“The DC Circulator is one of the best options to get around the District,” DDOT Director Everett Lott said in a statement.

“As the District continues to reopen, DC Circulator is a reliable and affordable transit option that connects riders from their homes to some of the District’s hottest attractions.”

To ride, you have to use a SmarTrip card or exact change in cash or coins. Fares for seniors and mobility impaired individuals are reduced to 50 cents.


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Kids under age 5 ride free with a paying adult. D.C. students ages 5 to 21, who are eligible for the Kids Ride Free Program, can use their KRF SmarTrip card to ride DC Circulator at no cost.

More information is available online.

Most crash-prone DC region roads, as reported by WTOP

If your commute involves the 14th Street Bridge, you have good reason to tune to WTOP for traffic on the 8s. Inbound drivers on the bridge aren't just headed for D.C., they're also headed straight onto the most crash-prone stretch of road in the D.C. area, according to WTOP Traffic Center data. Over the last four years, the WTOP Traffic Center recorded more than 91,000 crashes on the region’s interstates, federal parkways, state and local roadways. Doing this allows the traffic team to accurately report the latest traffic incidents you hear on air and see on the WTOP.com traffic page every day. Those tens of thousands of data points were used to generate a heat map for the region that shows hot spots where the frequency of crashes is higher compared to other parts of the area road network, as reported by WTOP.
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