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Blog
From Policy to Practice: Launching the Get on the Bus “The Ride Guide”
On October 9, 2025, the Get on the Bus movement officially launched the Ride Guide through a national webinar with communities, transit professionals, educators, and youth advocates from across Canada.
Full Steam Ahead: Youth Transit Validated, Scaled and Ready to Roll
At Get on the Bus, we’ve always believed that free and equitable youth access to public transit is one of those rare interventions that delivers across the board: access, autonomy, education, environment, and economy. We’re thrilled to see that belief confirmed by the new investment case report on the Kingston high school transit pass initiative.
Building a Shared Movement for Youth Transit Across Canada
Across Canada, municipalities, school boards, and community groups are taking bold steps to make public transit more accessible for youth through fare-free policies, engagement programs, and hands-on training. Each initiative is unique, yet the goal is shared: to help young people access opportunity, independence, and connection through transit, while at the same time meeting climate targets by reducing emissions.
Designing for the Future: How Equity and Innovation Go Hand-in-Hand
On June 3, 2025, I had the honour of being a panelist for Starfish Canada’s Climate Conversations: Top 25 Under 25 series. It was an energizing and hopeful space where we explored how equitable and innovative climate solutions can work together, not as opposing forces but as partners in building a better world.
From Kingston to Halifax: A Shared Vision for Youth-Centric Transit
In May 2025, Dan Hendry Program Director, traveled to Halifax to collaborate with the municipality and Halifax Transit on building a youth-centric transit culture. Halifax is already leading with its Student Transit Pass Pilot Program, which provides free annual transit passes to more than 30,000 students. Beyond free rides, the program is fostering independence, confidence, and safety for young people—helping transit become part of everyday life.
RBC Foundation Funding
We are pleased to share that Get on the Bus has received generous funding support from RBC Foundation. This funding will facilitate continued growth of our movement and help us get more youth on the bus!
"If You Give a Kid a Bus Pass, They’ll Go Far": Reflections from the Alberta Ecotrust Environmental Gathering
At the 2025 Alberta Ecotrust Environmental Gathering, I had the privilege of joining a panel on youth leadership and sharing the impact of Get on the Bus. Our message was clear: giving kids access to transit unlocks freedom, improves mental health, and supports families. I spoke about our Edmonton needs assessment, a youth-created transit mural, and research showing how independent mobility reduces anxiety and depression. The response was overwhelming, people from all sectors were energized and ready to act. When you give a kid a bus pass, they don’t just get a ride, they get a future.
A Movement Beyond One Voice: Reflections on Regina’s Free Transit for Youth
What began as a personal challenge sparked by family hardship evolved into Better Bus Youth, a student-led grassroots campaign that helped deliver real change. From the city’s first fare-free policy for kids under 13 to the recent unanimous approval of a high school transit pilot, the movement has grown thanks to a coalition of youth, community organizations, and municipal leaders. Now part of the national Get on the Bus initiative, Sophia’s story is a testament to what’s possible when young people organize for equity and opportunity.
From Kingston to the Capital – A Reflection on Youth Transit, Pilots, and Possibility
At the Connecting the Dots symposium in Ottawa, a former Kingston youth approached me and said, “You taught me how to ride the bus.” That full-circle moment captured the heart of my talk: youth transit programs build lifelong habits, equity, and community connection. From pilots in Kingston to international policy shifts, investing in youth mobility creates measurable change—and as Anna Zivarts reminded us, transit is ultimately about justice and inclusion.