Opentopia Directory Encyclopedia Tools

Oakville Transit

Encyclopedia : O : OA : OAK : Oakville Transit



 

left Oakville Transit is the public transportation provider in Oakville Ontario Canada since 1972. It is a department of the city, and a member of the Canadian Urban Transit Association. It offers the typical bus service, and a special service, called care-A-van, for those unable to use the normal bus. care-A-van takes riders directly to address they desire.

Routes and Connections

It connects with Burlington Transit to the west, and Mississauga Transit to the east. In addition, Oakville, Bronte, and Clarkson GO stations are also connected.

The Oakville GO rail and bus station — located at 214 Cross Avenue — is the main bus terminus, and those routes serving this station are noted below;

The following routes do not service the Oakville GO Station

Off-Peak Service: During the late evenings, and on Sundays, most of the fixed routes are replaced by the Zone Express. The southern area of the city is divided into 4 zones (basically east and west of Oakville GO/Trafalgar Road, and north and south of the Queen Elizabeth Way). While the operators will accept riders at the key transfer points, there is telephone (905-849-ZONE) correspondence in order to pick up and drop off riders at designated Oakville Transit stops, or transfer onto the other buses at the Oakville GO Station. After Midnight, the Zone Express will only drop off riders connecting from the last Lakeshore West GO Trains.

Oakville Transit also offers three peak hour express routes which all terminate at Oakville GO.

Accessible services (15px) are provided on the following routes:

All Oakville Transit buses are Easier Access, but the low floor buses and routes do not display the 15px logo.

Terminals

Current Fleet

Some of the Minibuses are also used in nearby Milton, as Milton Transit. There is no connecting service between these two communities at present.

15px denotes wheelchair accessibility

Fares

As of June 6, 2005, cash fare is $2.25. Passengers using GO Transit can show the driver their single or multi-ride ticket and pay a reduced fare of 50 cents. Tickets, monthly passes, and day passes are also available. Different discounts are available for the following: children, students attending elementary/secondary school, and seniors (65 years of age and older).

In June 2005, the provincial Minister of Transportation has announced plans to introduce the GTA Farecard, an unified smartcard-based payment system for the entire Greater Toronto Area similar to the Octopus Card used in Hong Kong.

See also

External links

 


From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.


Search Titles
0123456789
ABCDEFGHIJ
KLMNOPQRST
UVWXYZ?

E-mail this article to:

Personal Message: