Transportation Waterloo is located at the northern end of
Interstate 380.
U.S. Highways 20,
63, and
218 and
Iowa Highway 21 also run through the metropolitan area. The
Avenue of the Saints runs through Waterloo.
American Airlines provides non-stop air service to and from Chicago from the
Waterloo Regional Airport as of April 3, 2012. As of October 27, 2014, American Airlines runs two flights to/from Chicago O'Hare (ORD). Departures to Chicago are early morning and mid/late afternoon. Arrivals are early/mid-afternoon and evening. Waterloo is served by a
metropolitan bus system (MET), which serves most areas of Cedar Falls and Waterloo. Most routes meet at the central bus station in downtown Waterloo. The system operates Monday through Saturday. During the week the earliest bus is at 5:45 am from downtown Waterloo, and the last bus arrives downtown at 6:40 pm. Service is limited on Saturdays. Waterloo is served by one daily intercity bus arrival and departure to Chicago and
Des Moines, provided by
Burlington Trailways. New service to and from
Mason City and
Minneapolis/St. Paul provided by
Jefferson Lines started in the fall of 2009, however was canceled in 2012. There are currently four taxi operators in Waterloo and Cedar Falls: First Call, Yellow, City Cab, Cedar Valley Cab, and Dolly's Taxi. The
Chicago Central railroad runs through Waterloo.
Utilities The
MidAmerican Energy Company supplies Waterloo with electricity and natural gas. The Waterloo Water Works supplies
potable water with a capacity of 50,400,000 GPD (gallons per day) with an average use of 13,400,000 GPD and a peak use of 28,800,000 GPD. News reports indicate that 18.5% of the system's output in 2013, or 851 million gallons, was unaccounted for.
Sanitation service (sewage) is operated by the city of Waterloo, with a capacity of 36,500,000 GPD and an average use of 14,000,000 GPD.
Healthcare Waterloo is home to two hospitals, Mercy One Waterloo Medical Center, which has 366 beds, and Unity Point Health Allen Memorial Hospital, with 234 beds. Neighboring Cedar Falls is home to Sartori Memorial Hospital, with 83 beds. The Waterloo-Cedar Falls metropolitan area has 295 physicians, 69 dentists, 52 chiropractors, 24 vision specialists and 21 nursing/retirement homes. == Notable people == •
Julie Adams (1926–2019), actress •
Jerome Amos Jr. (born 1954), politician •
Michele Bachmann (born 1956), politician •
Hal C. Banks (1909-1985), corrupt Canadian labour leader •
David Barrett (born 1977), American football player •
William Birenbaum (1923–2010), educator •
Horace Boies (1827–1923), politician •
Bob Bowlsby (born 1952), athletics administrator •
Jack Bruner (1924–2003), baseball player •
Don Denkinger (1926–2003), baseball umpire •
Adam DeVine (born 1983), comedian, actor and writer •
Loren Doxey, physician and murderer •
Pearlretta DuPuy (1871–1939), zither player and clubwoman •
Rich Folkers (born 1946), baseball player and coach •
Travis Fulton (1977–2021), boxer and mixed martial artist •
Dan Gable (born 1948), wrestler and coach •
John Wayne Gacy (1942–1994), serial killer •
Kim Guadagno (born 1959), politician •
Mike Haffner (born 1942), American football player •
Nikole Hannah-Jones (born 1976), journalist •
Lou Henry Hoover (1874–1944), First Lady •
MarTay Jenkins (born 1975), American football player •
Anesa Kajtazović (born 1986), politician •
Arthur Rolland Kelly (1878–1959), architect •
Chris Klieman (born 1967), football coach, •
Bonnie Koloc (born 1946), singer-songwriter •
John Hooker Leavitt (1831–1906), politician •
Jason Lewis (born 1955), politician •
Jack Little (1899–1956), songwriter •
David Madson (1963–1997), architect, LGBTQ+ rights and HIV/AIDS activist •
J. J. Moses (born 1979), American football player •
Charles W. Mullan (1845–1919), politician •
Larry Nemmers (born 1943), American football official •
Thunderbolt Patterson (born 1941), professional wrestler •
Joe Pelton (born 1977), poker player •
Don Perkins (1938–2022), American football player •
Cal Petersen (born 1994), ice hockey player •
Gordon Randolph (1915–1999), journalist •
Alfred C. Richmond (1902–1984), U.S. Coast Guard Admiral •
Mike Ritland, US Navy SEAL •
Gertrude Ina Robinson (1868–1950), harpist, composer and writer •
Reggie Roby (1961–2005), American football player •
Zud Schammel (1910–1973), American football player •
Sean Schemmel (born 1968), voice actor •
Duane Slick, (born 1961) painter and professor •
Tom Smith (born 1949), football player •
Vivian Smith (1891–1961), suffragist •
Paul Sohl (born 1963), U.S. Navy Rear Admiral •
Tracie Spencer (born 1976), singer-songwriter •
Darren Sproles (born 1983), American football player; running back for fifteen seasons •
Bradley Steffens (born 1955), writer •
Suzanne Stephens (born 1946), clarinetist and basset horn player •
Sullivan Brothers, U.S. Navy sailors and brothers •
Corey Taylor (born 1973), musician •
Michael Townley (born 1942), agent •
Mike van Arsdale (born 1965), mixed martial artist •
Mona Van Duyn (1921–2004), poet •
Emily West (born 1981), singer •
Nancy Youngblut (born 1953), actress •
Pat McLaughlin (born 1950), singer-songwriter •
Bruce B. Zager (born 1952), judge ==Twin towns and sister cities==