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The Pinellas Suncoast Transit Authority (PSTA) is a government agency that provides public transportation for Pinellas County, Florida.The authority manages a fixed-route bus system that encompasses over 40 bus routes - including two express routes to Tampa; the Central Avenue Trolley; the Suncoast Beach Trolley; and the bus rapid transit service, the SunRunner.
PSTA is in the process of building 16 stations for their new SunRunner express line to the beach, with each one incorporating a different stained glass work depicting the neighborhood the station ...
Sunrunner may also refer to: Pontiac Sunrunner or Asüna Sunrunner, a mini SUV marketed by General Motors; Sunrunner's Fire, the third book in the Dragon Prince trilogy by Melanie Rawn; SunRunner, the bus rapid transit service offered by the Pinellas Suncoast Transit Authority; Sunrunner (Transformers), an autobot
Lynx (stylized as LYNX) is a transit system serving the greater Orlando, Florida area. Operated by the Central Florida Regional Transportation Authority, it provides bus, curb-to-curb, and paratransit services in three counties: Orange, Seminole, and Osceola.
Sunrun was co-founded in January 2007 by Lynn Jurich, Ed Fenster, and Nat Kreamer with a business model in which it offered customers either a lease or a Power Purchase Agreement (PPA) business model whereby homeowners paid for electricity usage but did not buy solar panels outright, reducing the initial capital outlay required by the homeowner.
Serving Routes 16, 34, 35, 39, Town-N-Country FLEX service, and the PSTA Tampa/Oldsmar Flex Connector. Tampa International Airport Rental Car Facility Bus Hub : Located on the grounds of TPA Airport, adjacent to the new Rental Car Facility, five bus loading bays along a straightaway drive allows for loading and unloading of transit buses, with ...
On Friday, January 31, 2014, the Florida Department of Transportation announced that SunRail would begin service on May 1, 2014. [62] SunRail initially offered a series of free test runs in April, [63] but canceled them and instead decided to open for free for the first two weeks of service in May. This enabled remaining work to be completed in ...
Open access to transmission facilities arose from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) Order 888, issued April 24, 1996. [1] This order required each utility which transmitted electric energy in interstate commerce to file an Open Access Transmission Tariff (OATT) to stipulate the process for non-discriminatory access to its transmission facilities.