Cape May County Freeholder E. Marie Hayes with Fare Free driver Gene Glembocki and Fare Free Director Dan Mulraney during an awards ceremony. (Photo courtesy Fare-Free Transportation Facebook page)
By MADDY VITALE
Cape May County’s Fare-Free Transportation provides rides to seniors, the disabled, veterans and low-income residents who need to get to appointments, shopping and other places.
But it is a free service that is underutilized, explained Dan Mulraney, director of Cape May County Fare-Free Transportation.
Mulraney thinks one of the main reasons that ridership is not as strong as it could be is the fact that people must call three days in advance to reserve their spots on the van.
“We do a lot of good things, but I think we can provide more service and better service,” he said. “Over the course of several years we have seen a decline in ridership. Part of that is making people wait for the trips. Maybe, there is a better way to do it.”
So, Fare-Free Transportation officials came up with a pilot program for Ocean City residents to boost ridership. From 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday, beginning possibly as early as March, riders will be picked up and dropped off at different locations in the resort.
Instead of waiting three days to set up the ride times, passengers will only need to use an app being created for the pilot program, Mulraney said.
“In a world of instant gratification, if you could use a Fare-Free app sort of like an Uber -- why not?”
Currently, Mulraney said Fare-Free provides an average of 110,000 trips per year for riders throughout the county. Of that number, 1,200 trips every three months are by Ocean City residents.
“We would like to surpass that number as we move into this project,” Mulraney said of Ocean City ridership. “We are very excited.”
He noted that Ocean City is an area underserved by Fare-Free.

Cape May County Freeholder E. Marie Hayes with Fare-Free driver Gene Glembocki, center, and Fare-Free Director Dan Mulraney during an awards ceremony. (Photo courtesy Fare-Free Transportation Facebook page)
Cape May County Freeholder E. Marie Hayes, of Ocean City, who oversees transportation, is closely involved with the county’s Fare-Free Transportation program.
She spoke about the program at a Jan. 27 meeting of the Southern New Jersey Freeholders’ Association at the historic Flanders Hotel.
Hayes called Fare-Free drivers “the ambassadors of the county.”
“Some of the riders never see anybody else. Their driver takes them for meals and doctor’s appointments. I have so much respect for that department.”
Hayes said she is committed to working to make Fare-Free more accessible to more residents in Cape May County and is looking forward to the success of the pilot program in Ocean City.
For more information call Cape May County Fare-Free Transportation at (609) 889-3700.