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From 1967 to 2016, Metro Transit services were operated by the city of Kalamazoo. The Metro bus depot and the Kalamazoo Transportation Center are owned by the city of Kalamazoo, and are leased to the CCTA for $1 per year. [13] As of 2012, the executive director of Metro is Sean McBride. [11]
Dial-A-Ride-Transit services are assigned route numbers 900-939. [4] Custom bus routes are assigned route numbers from 950-999. [4] The King County Water Taxi uses route numbers 973 and 975. Currently routes serving the private Lakeside School and University Prep in Seattle are assigned route numbers 980-999.
King County Metro is the public transit authority of King County, Washington, including the city of Seattle in the Puget Sound region.It operates a fleet of 1,396 buses, serving 115 million rides at over 8,000 bus stops in 2012, making it the eighth-largest transit agency in the United States.
While Downtown Seattle is Metro's main transit hub, transit centers act as smaller regional hubs and are served by many bus routes. Some transit centers also offer a park and ride facility. Metro operates out of several transit centers located throughout King County, some of which are shared with Sound Transit and other county agencies. [70]
Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority (Metro Bus) Los Angeles County: Los Angeles: 754,700 2,410 257,398 [103] [104] [105] Los Angeles Department of Transportation: Los Angeles: Los Angeles 83,406 258 21,639 [106] [107] Marguerite: Stanford University (and connections to Palo Alto) Stanford: 6,300 Marin Transit: Marin County
Has the features of a RapidRide bus, but will be wrapped in regular metro livery and operate regular routes until the opening of the H Line in March 2023. [44] 2015–2016: 8000–8084 (85) Equipped with three doors for use on urban routes. 2017–2018: 8100–8199 (100) Equipped with two doors for use on suburban routes. 2018 8200–8299 (100)
Buses are operated under contract by King County Metro, Pierce Transit and Community Transit (who subcontracts with Transdev). [9] When Sound Transit implements a new bus route, changes are frequently made to existing routes that serve the area to avoid overlapping. The ST Express routes and operators as of September 14, 2024 are: [10]
The first set of nine express bus routes launched on September 19, 1999, and served regional destinations and 33 park and ride lots in the three counties; [34] [97] an existing King County Metro express route from Seattle to Bellevue and Pierce Transit's Seattle–Tacoma express were also transferred to Sound Transit.