Island Explorer

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Founded1999
Service typeBus service
Island Explorer
Founded1999
LocaleMount Desert Island, Maine
Service areaHancock County, Maine
Service typeBus service
Routes10
DestinationsAcadia National Park, Bar Harbor, Trenton, Schoodic Peninsula
Fleet36 buses, 4 vans
Fuel typePropane
OperatorDowneast Transportation
Chief executivePaul Murphy
Websitehttp://www.exploreacadia.com

The Island Explorer is a seasonal bus system which provides fare-free transportation on and near Mount Desert Island in Maine, United States. It is operated by Downeast Transportation and is largely intended to serve visitors to Acadia National Park as a means to reduce area traffic within the park and in area communities, including the Schoodic Peninsula. It typically runs from mid-June through the beginning of October, departing from Kennebec Street to the west of Bar Harbor's Village Green. Operations began in 1999, and in 2019, the service carried over 647,000 passengers.[1]

The service began operations in 1999. Regular operations are funded from a variety of sources, including a dedicated portion of Acadia National Park entrance fees from the National Park Service, the Maine Department of Transportation, L.L. Bean, municipal governments, the group Friends of Acadia, as well as local businesses directly served by the service. L.L. Bean's contribution totals $4 million since 2002.[1] To reduce pollution, the bus fleet is powered by propane. 21 new buses were purchased in 2019 to replace a portion of the fleet of 36, the purchase funded by the National Park Service and State of Maine. The service also has four vans and two bicycle trailers. The service typically hires 110 drivers a year.[1] Buses carry 30 seated and 13 standing passengers. [2]

Service is typically offered from June 23 through the beginning of October, with service on the Schoodic Peninsula beginning slightly earlier on Memorial Day.[2] Since 1999, the service has carried 7.7 million passengers. It has prevented 41 tons of smog-causing pollutants and 27,000 tons of greenhouse gases from being released.[1]

COVID-19

See also

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI