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By 1981 the company was owned by Canada Steamship Lines Inc., 50% owned by Paul Martin's family. The Quebec routes were sold to other operators over the following decade, and in 1994 Greyhound purchased key Ottawa and Toronto routes from Voyageur. In 1998 CSL sold Voyageur to Greyhound Canada, which in turn is owned by the UK-based FirstGroup.
These stations were served by Greyhound Canada, the Canadian subsidiary of Greyhound Lines, which ceased operations on May 13, 2021. Ajax Plaza Bus Terminal, Ajax, Ontario; Barrie Bus Terminal, Barrie, Ontario; Belleville Transit Terminal, Belleville, Ontario; Downtown Brampton Terminal, Brampton, Ontario; Edmonton station, Edmonton, Alberta
Greyhound Canada announced in March 2008 [8] it would move the Winnipeg bus terminal from the Mall Centre in downtown Winnipeg to a new C$6.3 million building with a single storey structure with separate areas for freight and passengers [9] inside of a 930 m 2 (10,000 sq ft) of passenger space and 930 m 2 (10,000 sq ft) of cargo processing ...
Grey Goose Bus Lines Limited The partnership of Gary M. Lewis, Elmer Clay, William R. Lewis, Albert J. Todd, and Alfred Hurshman was incorporated as Grey Goose Bus Lines Limited. 1961-1997
In May 2021, Greyhound Canada shut down all of its bus routes in Canada. Greyhound Lines continues to operate four cross-border routes that either start or finish in the U.S. from Toronto, Montreal, and Vancouver: [133] [134] the company also placed 38 buses used by its Canada division up for auction. [135]
Laidlaw (/ ˈ l eɪ d ˌ l ɔː /), organized as Laidlaw International, Inc. (with corporate headquarters in Naperville, Illinois) was the largest provider of intercity bus services, contract public transit and paratransit, and contract school bus service in both the United States and Canada.
417 Bus Line is a coach and school bus operator in Casselman, a small village on Ontario Provincial Highway 417 between Ottawa and Montreal.The company began as Laplante Bus Line in 1958, which became Casselman Bus Line in 1965 and was incorporated in 1974 as 417 Bus Line Ltd.
The renovated former Winnipeg Bus Terminal (formerly a Greyhound Canada bus depot), located at Balmoral Street next to the University of Winnipeg, is the downtown terminus for the Southwest Transitway's BLUE Line rapid transit route. Harkness Station: BLUE, 47, 65, 66, 68, 635: Located at the intersection of Harkness and Stradbrook Avenues.