Cornwall Transit (also known as TheBus, its fonts similar to Honolulu, Hawaii's), serves the City of Cornwall, Ontario, Canada with 15 buses that transport about 538,833 passengers per year.[2] Founded in 1971 and originally operated under contract by A.J. McDonald Limited the system has been city run since 1974.[3] It provided bus service replaced the Cornwall Street Railway, which provided tram service since the end of the 19th century.

Cornwall Transit
Founded1971
Headquarters863 Second St. West, Cornwall ON
Service areaCornwall, Ontario
Service typeBus service, Paratransit
Routes7 regular routes
1 Community bus
4 Industrial specials
Stops305[1]
Fleet14
OperatorCity of Cornwall
WebsiteCornwall Transit

A comprehensive service review conducted in 2000[4] focused on the needs of three specific groups: students, industrial employees, and seniors. The report, based on one primary principle: transit should directly and conveniently take passengers where they want to go, was approved by council in November 2000, and many of the recommendations were immediately implemented. Several types of service are now provided, including conventional bus routes, community bus, paratransit service, supplementary industry area service and charters.[5]

Services edit

Cornwall Transit operates 7 conventional transit routes and 1 community bus route. 6 of these services are interlined, with the interconnected routes maintaining the same number on both routes.

    • 1 Pitt
    • 2 Sunrise
    • 3 Brookdale
    • 4 Riverdale
    • 5 McConnell
    • 6 Cumberland
    • 7 Montreal
    • 61 Community Bus

Additionally, the operator runs a fixed industrial service with four different deviations to serve the needs and shifts of workers at city plants.

    • S1: loop through the industrial sector running every 30 minutes
    • S2: one early morning run to the Prince Foods plant
    • S3: two midday runs to the Prince Foods and SCM plants
    • S4: one midnight run from the Prince Foods plant

Cornwall also operates the Handi-Transit paratransit service for physically challenged individuals, as well as a community bus route that offers several midday flexible loops based on passenger demand.

Fleet edit

The fleet consists of 14 LFS (4th generation) with diesel and diesel-electric hybrid propulsion used for regular routes

Cornwall once operated trolleybuses with 16 Canadian Car and Foundry T-44 used from 1949 to 1970. Upon the termination of trolleybus service 12 T-44 were sold to the Toronto Transit Commission for parts.

History edit

 
CNR railway station in Cornwall, 1926

Timeline of public transportation in Cornwall.[6]

1896 to 1902 - Cornwall Electric Street Railway Company
1902 to 1970 - Cornwall Street Railway, Light and Power Company, Limited
1971 to current - Cornwall Transit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Cornwall Transit GTFS - OpenMobilityData". transitfeeds.com. Retrieved 9 November 2022.
  2. ^ Mid-Sized Transit Service Helps Change Thinking About Natural Gas Archived 2011-07-06 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ All-Time List of Canadian Transit Systems by David A. Wyatt
  4. ^ "Cornwall Transit, Comprehensive Service Review" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2006-11-30. Retrieved 2008-01-11.
  5. ^ About Cornwall
  6. ^ "100 Years of Service" by Karen Carter-Edwards, Cornwall Electric 1987, ISBN 0-9692908-0-2