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WJRW (1340 AM) – branded as The Ticket – is a commercial sports radio station licensed to Grand Rapids, Michigan, serving the Grand Rapids metropolitan area. Owned by Cumulus Media, WJRW is the Grand Rapids affiliate for the BetQL Network, CBS Sports Radio, and Fox Sports Radio. The WJRW studios and transmitter both reside in Grand Rapids.
The Laker Line is a 13.1-mile (21.1 km) BRT line connecting downtown Grand Rapids with the main campus of Grand Valley State University in Allendale. The line, which primarily runs along Lake Michigan Drive, has 12 stops in Grand Rapids and Walker and two at GVSU; no stops are made between GVSU's campus and the Kent-Ottawa county line.
It was funded by a US$3.8 million grant from the Federal Railroad Administration and $850,000 from the City of Grand Rapids. [2] Due to delays in construction from CSX and the City of Grand Rapids, the station construction started in the summer of 2013. [15] [16] The new station opened on October 27, 2014. [17] [18]
Rapid Central Station (also known as the Transit Center) is an intermodal transit station in downtown Grand Rapids, Michigan. It is operated by The Rapid and serves as Grand Rapids' main city bus station as well as a station on the Silver Line bus rapid transit. It is located on Grandville Avenue between Cherry Street and Wealthy Street, and is ...
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Unlike on the regular bus services, fares were paid or validated prior to boarding. Off-board fare payment was discontinued in 2022. [2] On September 1, 2016, the service was made fare-free in the downtown area between Central Station and Wealthy Street. Rides originating or with destination south of Wealthy Street were subject to payment.
Amtrak revived the name for a new Grand Rapids–Chicago service on August 5, 1984, [7] with financial support from the state of Michigan. [8] Initially it served Chicago, Hammond–Whiting, New Buffalo, St. Joseph, Bangor, Holland and Grand Rapids. Service at Hammond–Whiting ended April 29, 2001 (although the Wolverine still stops there ...
As of January 1, 2020, all 16 year olds employed by the company were let go, and there were still plans to lay off all 17 year olds effective July 2020; [2] [3] these plans were announced before the COVID-19 pandemic took hold in the United States. Since the new ownership took over in July 2020, they have rehired 16 and 17 year olds and no ...