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1-99 primarily serve the northwestern part of Contra Costa County and most of Alameda County. 200-299 serve the southern part of Alameda County and Milpitas. 300-399 serve combined portions of other bus lines, usually only at certain times of day or certain days of the week. 600-699 operate primarily on school days only.
AC Transit (Alameda-Contra Costa Transit District) is an Oakland-based public transit agency serving the western portions of Alameda and Contra Costa counties in the East Bay of the San Francisco Bay Area. AC Transit also operates "Transbay" routes across San Francisco Bay to San Francisco and selected areas in San Mateo and Santa Clara counties.
The Alameda County Transportation Commission (abbreviated as ACTC or as Alameda CTC) is a government agency responsible for planning of county-wide transportation efforts, allocating of funding to street, highway, bicycle, pedestrian, and transit programs, and management of select construction projects across Alameda County, California.
Tri Delta Transit, formally the Eastern Contra Costa Transit Authority, is a joint powers agency of the governments of Pittsburg, Antioch, Oakley, Brentwood, and Contra Costa County that provides bus service for the eastern area of Contra Costa County, California, United States. [1]
Wheels is a public bus service in the Tri-Valley region (southeast Alameda County) of the San Francisco Bay Area in California, United States.It is operated by the Livermore Amador Valley Transit Authority (LAVTA).
The cost of providing paratransit service is considerably higher than traditional fixed-route bus service, with Maryland's Mobility service reporting per-passenger costs of over $40 per trip in 2010. [29] Paratransit ridership growth of more than 10% per year was reported in the District of Columbia metropolitan area for 2006 through 2009.
The County Connection (officially, the Central Contra Costa Transit Authority, CCCTA) is a Concord-based public transit agency operating fixed-route bus and ADA paratransit (County Connection LINK) service in and around central Contra Costa County in the San Francisco Bay Area.
The Alameda-Contra Costa Transit District bus fleet, serving the counties of Alameda and Contra Costa, is the third-largest in California. It was initially formed in 1960 (65 years ago) ( 1960 ) with a mixture of gasoline and diesel-powered buses purchased from its immediate predecessor, the privately owned Key System .