(BOSTON) – BOSTON – Burlington
area businesses have a reason to celebrate the new year, as the Middlesex 3
Coalition, Senator Cindy Friedman (D-Arlington) and Representative Ken Gordon
(D-Bedford) have secured funding necessary to establish a shuttle service that
will allow local restaurants to fill hundreds of job openings with otherwise
unemployed workers from Lowell.
The program, which has been a major priority for the
Burlington Area Chamber of Commerce, was awarded $290,000 over three years by
the Boston Region Metropolitan Planning Organization (“MPO”). Previously this fiscal year, the Middlesex 3 Coalition
was awarded $125,000 by the Commonwealth to fund a regional transportation
coordinator, bringing the total state support to $415,000 over a three-year
period.
“We have been advocating for this program for
several years now, and we are ecstatic that it is coming together,” said BACC
President Rick Parker. “It began at a
meeting when dozens of our restaurants came to me and Rep. Gordon, and told us
that if we could access the Lowell labor market, they could find applications
for a significant number of job openings that are going unfilled. Rep. Gordon and I never gave up on this
concept, and it’s great to see it come through.”
The program will be funded largely by public
investments in the first year, and then will transition to private support over
three years. By the fourth year of the program, the transportation service will
be funded entirely by the area businesses.
It will begin as a link between Lowell and Burlington, but as it grows,
plans are for it to extend to communities such as Bedford and Billerica, as
well as provide access to seniors and others members of the community.
“This is the epitome of a team effort,” said Rep.
Gordon. “We began by laying out a plan.
Rick Parker never stopped working.
Stephanie Cronin, Executive Director of the Middlesex 3 Coalition, was
instrumental in the details. Rep. David Nangle (D-Lowell) offered his help and
guidance. And when Sen. Friedman took
office, she stepped right in and continued the hard work that Sen. Ken Donnelly
began.”
“In 2014, the legislature appropriated the money for
our plan, and then we turned to the Administration. There are many worthy causes competing for
economic development support, but Jay Ash, the Secretary of Housing and
Economic Development, came to Burlington several times where he listened to our
challenges. We brought in the Department
of Transportation, and from there the Governor’s office approved our plan.”
The program will operate through the Middlesex 3
Transportation Management Association (TMA). Those who work on weekends or late
at night will be picked up in Lowell and taken express to Burlington so that
they can get to their employer on time. Riders will have transportation back
home again, even in those instances where a sick child or other emergency may
require them to return home mid-shift.
“Burlington has such a vibrant local economy and a
wide variety of successful businesses” said Sen. Friedman. “This program will be another opportunity for
those businesses to access the workforce they need to succeed, ultimately
strengthening our local and regional economies. Moreover, it will alleviate the
traffic that congests our roads by transporting hundreds of workers into town,
without requiring each of them to drive their own cars.”
Katherine Holahan, Vice-President at the Associated
Industries of Massachusetts, demonstrated her group’s support of the program in
a letter to the Boston MPO. “We believe
this is an opportunity for government and business to work together to connect
workers and employers across the Commonwealth to facilitate stronger economic
development.”
Regional transportation has been a focus of the
Middlesex 3 Coalition from its inception, and its TMA was the choice of the
business community to operate the system. “We worked hard with state and
municipal government to identify the best ways to connect the Lowell workers
with these opportunities,” said Middlesex 3 Executive Director Stephanie
Cronin. “It was not easy, but the businesses stepped up, the Town of Burlington
contributed, and when the state gave us final approval, we carried the program
to the finish. We will all benefit from
this opportunity.”
Questions? Contact: [email protected]