Connect Transit (Bloomington-Normal)

Transportation · Illinois · Paid

Public transit serving Bloomington-Normal with fixed routes and demand-response paratransit for the twin cities area of McLean County. Connect Transit operates weekday and Saturday bus service connecting residents to Illinois State University, employment centers, medical facilities, and downtown areas. Reduced fares are available for seniors and persons with qualifying disabilities. Call 309-828-9833 or visit connect-transit.com for routes, schedules, and fare details.

Contact & Details

Address: 351 Wylie Dr, Normal, IL 61761

Phone: 309-828-9833

Hours: Mon-Sat 6am-10pm

Visit Website

About Transportation for Fathers

Transportation assistance helps fathers get to work, court, medical appointments, and childcare. Public transit passes are often available free or discounted through TANF, Medicaid non-emergency medical transportation (NEMT), and social service agencies. Many job training programs cover bus passes. The Ways to Work program and some community action agencies provide low-interest car loans to working parents. State DMVs typically require proof of insurance and current registration; low-cost insurance programs exist for low-income drivers in several states (California's Low Cost Auto Insurance is one example). For rural fathers without reliable transit, dial-a-ride and volunteer driver programs are coordinated through Area Agencies on Aging and community action agencies. Medicaid NEMT covers rides to covered medical visits at no cost. This directory includes transit authorities, Medicaid NEMT providers, and car-ownership assistance programs.

Transportation in Illinois

Illinois handles family law through circuit courts in each of its 23 judicial circuits, with Cook County running its own Domestic Relations Division. The Division of Child Support Services handles enforcement. Chicago dominates the state; downstate metros include Aurora, Rockford, Joliet, Naperville, and Peoria. Legal Aid Chicago (formerly CVLS) and Land of Lincoln Legal Aid cover most of the state for low-income fathers.

More Transportation in Illinois

  • CTA (Chicago Transit Authority) — Chicago's public transit system operating buses and L trains with reduced fare programs for seniors, students, persons with disabilities, an
  • Pace Suburban Bus — Suburban bus service connecting communities across the six-county Chicago region with fixed routes, paratransit, and vanpool services throug
  • Metra Commuter Rail — Commuter railroad serving 11 lines across the Chicago metropolitan area connecting suburbs to downtown, with reduced fare options for eligib
  • Illinois Secretary of State - Driver's License Reinstatement — State office handling driver's license reinstatement for suspensions and revocations, including payment plans and formal hearing scheduling
  • RTA (Regional Transportation Authority) — Agency coordinating CTA, Metra, and Pace services and administering reduced fare permits for seniors and persons with disabilities in the Ch
  • Illinois Tollway - I-PASS Assist Program — Low-income assistance program eliminating the
    0 transponder deposit and allowing I-PASS accounts to be opened with as little as $4 in prep

Transportation — Common Questions

Can I get help affording a car?
Some community action agencies and programs like Ways to Work, Wheels to Work, or Good News Garage offer low-interest loans or donated vehicles to working parents. Eligibility typically requires employment or training and income under a threshold. Waitlists can be long.
What is Medicaid NEMT?
Non-Emergency Medical Transportation — Medicaid must cover rides to and from covered medical appointments at no cost. Call the transportation number on the back of your Medicaid card to schedule. Rides must be arranged in advance (usually 2–3 business days).
Are there reduced-fare transit options?
Most transit agencies offer reduced fares for seniors, disabled riders, and Medicaid enrollees. TANF and some workforce programs include transit passes. Some employers subsidize transit through pre-tax benefits. Contact your local transit authority for eligibility.
What if I live in a rural area with no bus?
Dial-a-ride services, volunteer driver programs through Area Agencies on Aging, rural transit partnerships, and Medicaid NEMT serve rural residents. Community action agencies coordinate much of this. Call 211 for a local referral.