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  2. FedEx Ground - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FedEx_Ground

    FedEx bought Caliber in 1998 to complement its existing FedEx Express business and rebranded Caliber's RPS package delivery service FedEx Ground in 2000. FedEx Ground provides US and Canada domestic services as well as international services between the two, branded FedEx International Ground. Its services are cheaper than the time-definite ...

  3. Transportation in Edmonton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transportation_in_Edmonton

    Transport in Edmonton is fairly typical for a Canadian city of its size, involving air, rail, road and public transit. With very few natural barriers to growth and largely flat to gently rolling terrain bisected by a deep river valley, the city of Edmonton has expanded to cover an area of nearly 768 km 2 (297 sq mi), of which only two-thirds is built-up, while the metropolitan area covers ...

  4. List of international airports in Canada - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_international...

    As defined by Transport Canada, an international airport: . means any airport designated by the Contracting State, in whose territory it is situated, as an airport of entry and departure for international commercial air traffic, where the formalities incident to customs, immigration, public health, animal and plant quarantine and similar procedures are carried out.

  5. Pacific Western Transportation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pacific_Western_Transportation

    Pacific Western Transportation (also d/b/a P.W. Transportation) provides a variety of bus services in the Canadian provinces of British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Ontario and Yukon. Depending on the location, it offers scheduled and chartered school busing, municipal transit and handi-bus services, airport passenger services and local and ...

  6. Transportation in Canada - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transportation_in_Canada

    At one time, over 300 harbours across Canada were supervised by the Department of Transport. [6] A program of divestiture was implemented around the turn of the millennium, and as of 2014, 493 of the 549 sites identified for divestiture in 1995 have been sold or otherwise transferred, [ 48 ] as indicated by a DoT list. [ 49 ]

  7. Edmonton International Airport - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edmonton_International_Airport

    The 1963 airside terminal with an Air Canada DC-9-30 at a jet bridge gate (1979) Transport Canada selected the current site for Edmonton International Airport, on the opposite side of the city from the military airport at RCAF Station Namao, and purchased over 28 km 2 (7,000 acres) of land.

  8. List of public transit authorities in Canada - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_public_transit...

    British Columbia: 8,275 Revelstoke Transit System Kitimat: British Columbia: 8,131 Kitimat Transit System Kimberley: British Columbia: 8,115 Kimberley Transit System Trail: British Columbia: 7,920 West Kootenay Transit System: Merritt: British Columbia: 7,051 Merritt Regional Transit System Yarmouth: Nova Scotia: 6,829 Town of Yarmouth Transit ...

  9. Urban rail transit in Canada - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Urban_rail_transit_in_Canada

    The Montreal Metro is Canada's second-busiest rail transit system. Drawing inspiration from the Paris Métro , it uses rubber-tired metro technology, the only such system in Canada. The 69.2-kilometre (43.0 mi) system has 68 stations on four lines, which serve the north, east, and central portions of the Island of Montreal , as well as the ...