Founded | 1972 (as Sudbury Transit) 2000 (as Greater Sudbury Transit) 2019 (relaunched as GOVA) |
---|---|
Headquarters | 200 Brady Street |
Locale | City of Greater Sudbury |
Service area | Azilda, Blezard Valley, Capreol, Chelmsford, Coniston, Copper Cliff, Downtown Sudbury, Elmview, Falconbridge, Garson, Hanmer, Laurentian University, Lively, Minnow Lake, New Sudbury, Val Caron, Val Thérèse. |
Service type | Bus service, Paratransit |
Routes | 24 |
Stops | 1,081 |
Hubs | New Sudbury Hub (at New Sudbury Centre)[1] Downtown Transit Hub [2] South End Transit Hub (at Wal-Mart)[3] |
Depots | City of Greater Sudbury Transit and Fleet Centre, 1160 Lorne St, Sudbury, ON |
Operator | Growth & Development Dept.[4] |
Website | www.greatersudbury.ca/gova |
GOVA, formerly known as Greater Sudbury Transit, is a public transport authority that is responsible for serving bus routes in Greater Sudbury, Ontario, Canada and area. The network is the largest in Northern Ontario, comprising 41 routes operating between the hours of 5:00am to 10:00pm for regular service and from 10:00pm to 2:00am for night service. Due to the increase in ridership the service has been approved for articulating buses primarily used for the largest routes and during rush-hour times. The annual ridership for the year of 2014 was recorded at 5 million passengers at an estimate of 16,000 daily.[5]
The service rebranded as GOVA in August 2019.[6] The new name was selected to work bilingually, by pairing the English verb "go" with its French equivalent "va".
Overview
Greater Sudbury Transit features over 90 buses on 41 routes servicing the city centre and outlying neighbourhoods such as Capreol, Chelmsford, Lively and Falconbridge. Greater Sudbury Transit also provides door-to-door services for persons with physical disabilities known as Handi-Transit.
The bus fleet consists of 40' low floor buses from Orion with the Orion VI, NovaBus LFS and New Flyer D40LF buses that are in active service.
As of August 2010, the Greater Sudbury Transit bus fleet is compromised entirely of low floor "wheelchair accessible" buses - making Greater Sudbury Transit the first transit authority in all of Ontario to have an "Easier Access" bus fleet.
In 2006, Greater Sudbury Transit introduced five 40' coach-style buses from Nova Bus into its fleet. These buses service the city's longest routes, such as routes 701-Lively, 702-Azilda/Chelmsford, and 703-Val Caron/Hanmer/Capreol, providing increased comfort for those riders travelling long distances. These buses, which are described as having a "suburban-style interior", luggage racks, LED reading lights above each seat, and comfortable bucket seats with added cushioning.
Most routes meet at the Transit Centre in downtown Sudbury (the 103-Coniston and 303-Garson/Falconbridge depart from the New Sudbury Centre Monday to Saturday), and service is provided from 6:15 am to 12:30 am 7 days a week, 363 days a year. Bus service is limited to 6:15 pm on Christmas Eve. There is no bus service on Christmas Day. Private charters can also be arranged.
Greater Sudbury Transit also operates a trans-cab service for any outlying area which does not receive bus service (including Long Lake, Richard Lake, Radar Base, Skead, Wahnapitae, Whitefish and Dowling) which provides a taxi from the individual's home to a transit bus stop.
As of December 1, 2009, Greater Sudbury Transit buses feature a fully operational audio/visual stop announcement system for passengers who are hearing and/or visually impaired. The stop announcement system also helps non-disabled passengers who are not familiar with a bus route of the transit system if they are not sure where it is they need to get off at to reach their destination.
As of April 12, 2012, Greater Sudbury Transit has guaranteed seven bus routes (101, 182, 301, 501, 701, 702, 703) that will always be equipped with bike racks. Cyclists wishing to bring their bikes on other routes are permitted to bring their bike on-board according to the driver's discretion (e.g. not during rush-hour etc.). City staff have indicated that following the construction to the new transit garage there will theoretically be sufficient space within to equip the whole fleet with bike racks. There is not enough space within the current garage to accommodate the additional 0.8 m required per bus with a bike rack.
In 2018, it was announced that the City of Greater Sudbury had created a $99 million transit stimulus fund to be spent over a period of 10 years, $72 million of which was contributed by the federal and provincial governments, with the remainder being contributed by the city itself. Some ideas which were considered included a switch to electric buses (which would make Greater Sudbury Transit one of the first transit agencies in Canada to do so), improvements to cycling-transit integration, adoption of "smart" fare card technology, and a renewal of the existing diesel bus fleet.[7]
In February 2019, major changes were announced for the service to be supported by the $99 million fund, which would see the creation of a new bus route, more frequent service (especially on Sundays), more early morning service, fare reductions, and a restructuring of the entire local transit system around three major hubs, rather than the single downtown terminal. These hubs would include the existing terminal as well as one in New Sudbury and another at the south end of the city.[8]
History
Transit services in Sudbury began with the Sudbury & Copper Cliff Suburban Electric Railway (11 November 1915 - Fall 1951). The SCCSER acquired a secondary system, City Bus Lines (1947–1950), in 1950. In the fall of 1951, the company reorganized as Sudbury Bus Lines Limited (1951–1966). This later became an umbrella corporation, Laurentian Transit (Sudbury) Limited (1966–1972), for the joint operation of transit in Sudbury by Nickel Belt Coach Lines, Local Lines Limited, and DeLongchamp Cartage Company. Until 1972 the system was privately operated, but in that year it was taken over by the City of Sudbury Community Services Department under the name of Sudbury Transit (1972–2000). Sudbury Transit served an area population of 92,000 with a vehicle fleet of 33 buses and employed 103 workers (1991).
The transit system in and around Sudbury today was formed in 2000 during the amalgamation of the cities and towns of the Regional Municipality of Sudbury by combining the existing Sudbury bus service with the surrounding commuter bus lines of Rayside-Balfour, Valley East, and Walden. Thus, Greater Sudbury Transit has an enormous service area for its fleet.
The original Sudbury Transit logo was designed by renowned designer Stuart Ash in 1972.[9] The agency later used the municipal logo of Greater Sudbury on its vehicles rather than a distinct transit-specific logo.
In 2019, the service rebranded as GOVA.[10] Alongside the rebranding, the routes were reorganized to increase efficiency of travel; instead of the former model where all bus routes travelled to and from downtown, the new model features a number of selected high-frequency bus lines along major arterial routes, paired with collector buses that interchange with the high-frequency routes at one of several transit hubs in the city rather than directly travelling downtown.
Past names
- Sudbury & Copper Cliff Suburban Electric Railway (1915–1951)
- Sudbury Bus Lines, Ltd. (1951–1966)
- Laurentian Transit (Sudbury) Ltd. (1966–1972)
- Sudbury Transit (Sudbury) Ltd. (1972–2000)
- Greater Sudbury Transit (2000–2019)
Fleet
GOVA has a fleet of 59 buses.[11]
See also
References
- ↑ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2019-08-29. Retrieved 2019-08-29.
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: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ↑ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2019-08-29. Retrieved 2019-08-29.
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: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ↑ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2019-08-29. Retrieved 2019-08-29.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ↑ Growth & Development Department, Business Plans 2007-2008
- ↑ City of Greater Sudbury, ridership note
- ↑ "GOVA is set to go (or va...)". Sudbury Star, August 20, 2019.
- ↑ Gemmill, Angela (17 March 2018). "Sudbury has big plans for $99 million in transit funding". CBC.ca. Retrieved 4 July 2019.
- ↑ McKenzie, Jamie-Lee (25 February 2019). "Long-awaited changes coming to Sudbury transit services". CBC.ca. Retrieved 4 July 2019.
- ↑ Munari, Nicola-Matteo (2016). "Stuart Ash". Designculture. Retrieved 8 August 2018.
- ↑ McKenzie, Jamie-Lee (2019-08-27). "Riders give mixed reviews of Sudbury's new transit system". CBC. Retrieved 2021-06-26.
- ↑ MacMillan, Sarah (2021-06-22). "Transit advocate raising concerns over new GOVA buses". CBC. Retrieved 2021-06-26.