RTC Celebrates Groundbreaking for Mobility Training Center

Oct. 21, 2014
The MTC will help Southern Nevadans, especially senior residents and persons with disabilities, move more independently throughout our community.

The Regional Transportation Commission of Southern Nevada (RTC) and U.S. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) on Oct. 20 celebrated the groundbreaking of the RTC’s new Mobility Training Center (MTC). The MTC will help Southern Nevadans, especially senior residents and persons with disabilities, move more independently throughout our community.

At the MTC, the RTC will provide its Transit Mobility services, a free one-on-one or group training program, to local residents especially persons with disabilities and senior citizens. The MTC will teach residents how to use the RTC fixed route transit services safely and will provide them with the confidence necessary to travel independently.

The MTC will be the headquarters for the RTC’s Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) Paratransit certification program that is designed for individuals who experience physical, cognitive, or visual impairments and who are functionally unable to use the RTC’s fixed route transit services independently. Upon receiving ADA Paratransit certification, eligible individuals can then utilize the RTC’s Paratransit services, providing them with the freedom to travel to various destinations throughout Southern Nevada.

The RTC’s ADA certification team currently sees 450 clients per month. At the new MTC, the RTC anticipates it will be able to serve an additional 150 clients per month.

Funding from the Federal Transit Administration will account for $5.4 million – approximately 80 percent – of the project’s $6.7 million cost.  The RTC will fund the remaining 20 percent, $1.3 million.

“We continually are broadening the mobility options available in Southern Nevada, especially for our senior citizens and persons with disabilities,” said Tina Quigley, general manager of the RTC. “Every citizen in our community deserves the opportunity to access and use public transit options safely and effectively. The new MTC will enhance our capacity to serve our senior citizens and persons with disabilities, ensuring they have the mobility they need and want.”

“Southern Nevada continues to grow, and I share the RTC’s commitment to meeting the needs of our residents who have mobility challenges,” said U.S. Senator Harry Reid. “This new facility will serve thousands of citizens every year, enabling them to achieve a new sense of independence and get around our expansive valley more easily and efficiently.”

The new 14,700-plus sq. ft. facility will be located next to the RTC’s Sunset Maintenance Facility, near the 215-Beltway and Decatur Avenue. The MTC will be built over the next 12 months with an expected opening in Fall 2015.