metro >> on the cover Modern Travel Freshwater Transit seeks to develop public transportation systems in Detroit. Esther Allweiss Ingber I Contributing Writer CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 local riders to get around since SMART (Suburban Mobility Authority for Regional Transportation) stopped running buses on Scotia. When the Jewish Community Center in Oak Park closes at the end of August, Turkel said public transportation could bring non- driving members to the JCC in West Bloomfield. SMART Route 405 lets off near the JCC on Drake, just west of Maple, he said. Picking up the bus, though, sound- ed daunting as Turkel rattled off the different bus routes people would have to take to catch their 405 con- nection. Ultimately, the 405 doesn't help evening visitors to the JCC because the last bus leaves Maple- Drake around 6:40 p.m. There's also no Sunday service. In New York and San Francisco, cities with efficient mass transit, moving around town is not the chal- lenge it presents in Metro Detroit — but does transit have to stay like this? Does anyone care? Freshwater Transit Solutions cares and wants to provide solutions. The specialty transit firm in Detroit's Grand Circus Park district is intent on improving public transportation in our region. "A city is only as good as its abil- ity to attract the best talent to propel it forward:' said Stephen Maiseloff, Members of the Freshwater Transit Solutions team: Jessica Shaw and Julianna Freshwater Transit vice president. Tschirhart, both of Ferndale, and Maria Urquidi of Detroit; seated, Erika Linenfelser and "Modern transportation is the cost Stephen Maiseloff, both of Detroit. of entry for cities vying for post- grads to plant their roots and start a State University, where he played tennis non-existent transit points. career:' Tom Choske, a former staffer for ex- and spent "oodles of quality time at the Maiseloff is one of them himself. Raised MSU Hillel:' U.S. Rep. Hansen Clarke, and Maiseloff in Southfield and West Bloomfield, he's a Maiseloff, whose sisters are Alyssa and co-founded Freshwater Transit Solutions. product of suburbia, where the automobile Jen, became a bar mitzvah at Southfield- Choske, company president, directs a is king. He developed his passion for get- based Congregation Shaarey Zedek. team that includes researcher Julianna ting people from here to there after expe- "I had a surface level of understanding Tschirhart, project coordinator Danny Baum, principal planner Adrianna Jordan, riencing Chicago's enviable transit system. of transit services, said Maiseloff, who returned home from Chicago in 2012. "I He lived in the city while completing an operations specialist Steve Hamelin, design specialist Erika Linenfelser, and special MBA degree at Loyola University. wanted to explore real opportunities." The son of David and Ellen Maiseloff, He networked with former Detroiter contributors Jessica Shaw and Maria Urquidi. As VP, Maiseloff is in charge of Stephen went to Hillel Day School in Neil Greenberg of Washington, D.C. Farmington Hills for 10 years and gradu- Greenberg, with a background in transit business development. ated from West Bloomfield High School. applications in various cities, once devel- Freshwater is not a political organiza- He majored in psychology at Michigan oped a real-looking Detroit city map with tion. The company presents itself as "hav- N 8 ing the resources it takes to assemble a comprehensive transit strategy — from the plan to the campaign to the implementa- tion:' First Project With the expertise to work with multi- modal systems, including road, rail and water, the team's first major project, for the Detroit RiverFront Conservancy (DRFC), was developing a feasibility study on modes of transportation for the Detroit RiverWalk. Expect to see a water taxi service and trolley bus service operating soon along the Detroit RiverWalk, which eventually will extend 51/2 miles from the Ambassador Bridge to Gabriel Richard Park, east of the Belle Isle Bridge. "A group like ours doesn't necessarily exist in other cities:' Maiseloff said. "The Riverfront Conservancy didn't have its own planning arm, so they liked the mix we brought, including branding and mar- keting:' Speaking of Downtown, he noted that public transportation to Belle Isle cur- rently ends near the bridge at Jefferson, and also at Grand Boulevard. "The Riverfront and Belle Isle are not at capacity:' he said. "We want to fill those places, making them easier to approach so people stay longer:' One solution for Belle Isle could be a bus making a loop around the island, as designed in the feasibility study for the DRFC. Maiseloff and others concerned with Detroit's future are eagerly awaiting the M-1 RAIL Streetcar line, a commuter line that will link Downtown Detroit to Midtown. Construction of the tracks on Woodward Avenue began in July 2014; the project is anticipated to be completed in late 2016. M-1 will provide "frequent, higher- quality transit as one piece of the much broader system that's needed:' said Megan Owens, executive director of Transportation Riders United (TRU). The nonprofit is dedicated to improving transit through education, advocacy and engage- ment in the greater Detroit region. The streetcar line will "reintroduce peo- ple to transit and what transit could be:' said Owens, who also serves on the M-1 Advisory Council. Modern Travel on page 10 May 14 • 2015