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Triangle Transit Authority

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The Research Triangle Regional Public Transportation Authority which is known by the name Triangle Transit Authority (TTA) provides regional bus service to The Triangle region of North Carolina in the counties of Wake, Durham and Orange.

Contents

History

The 1989 Session of the North Carolina General Assembly enabled the creation of the Research Triangle Regional Public Transportation Authority (Triangle Transit Authority) as a regional public transportation authority serving Durham, Orange and Wake counties. The new unit of local government was chartered by the North Carolina Secretary of State on December 1 1989. In 1991, the General Assembly, subject to County approvals, authorized the TTA to levy a vehicle registration tax of up to $5 per registration. This tag tax finances the regional bus operations, ridesharing program and planning program. In 1997, the General Assembly, subject to County approvals, authorized the TTA to levy a rental vehicle tax of up to 5% of gross receipts. This tax, effective January 1, 1998, will finance the Regional Rail Transit System, originally scheduled to begin operation in 2008 (now tentative, awaiting redesign by special transit advisory commission). The TTA was created to plan, finance, organize, and operate a public transportation system for the Research Triangle area. It has three main program areas:

  1. Regional Bus Service
  2. Rideshare Service
  3. Regional Transit Planning

TTA is governed by a 13 member Board of Trustees. Ten members are appointed by the region's principal municipalities and counties and three members are appointed by the North Carolina Secretary of Transportation.

Bus service

Triangle Transit Authority runs regular fixed-route bus service between Raleigh, Durham and Chapel Hill, interfacing with their municipal bus systems. TTA's main transfer center is located in the Research Triangle Park, where TTA runs several shuttle routes throughout the day. During morning and evening rush hour, TTA runs routes serving Apex, Cary, and Garner. TTA restored service to Hillsborough at the beginning of 2006, in cooperation with Orange Public Transportation, after discontinuing previous Hillsborough service in 2002.

Funding

The regional rail line was allocated $20 million from the federal government in the 2005 budget proposed by President Bush.

Metropolitan Raleigh-Durham Transit Systems

Capital Area Transit (Raleigh)

  • 1881-1894 - Raleigh Street Railway
  • 1894-1908 - Raleigh Electric Co.
  • 1908-1921 - Carolina Power & Light Co.
  • 1921-1925 - Carolina Power & Light Co. (Electric Bond & Shares Co.)
  • 1925-1946 - Carolina Power & Light Co. (National Power & Light Co.)
  • 1930s - streetcars discontinued
  • 1946-1950 - Carolina Power & Light Company (CP&L).
  • 1950-1958 - White Transportation Co.
  • After 1958 - Raleigh City Coach Lines (City Coach Lines, Inc.)

Chapel Hill Transit

Main article: Chapel Hill Transit

Chapel Hill Transit operates public transportation services within the cities of Chapel Hill and Carrboro and on the campus of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in area of the southeast corner of Orange County, North Carolina. Chapel Hill and Carrboro are contiguous municipalities. Chapel Hill Transit began operations in August 1974. The total ridership, including fixed route, EZ Rider and Shared Ride Feeder service, for fiscal year ending June 30, 2005 was $5,871,988.

Orange Public Transportation

Main article: Orange Public Transportation

The Orange Public Transportation program, a division of the Orange County Department on Aging, offers van and bus service outside the Chapel Hill-Carrboro city limits including planning and coordinating for county residents with transportation needs. It serves the general public and the clients of community service agencies, primarily in rural areas of the County.

Durham Area Transit Authority

The City of Durham assumed the operation of the local Duke Power bus system in 1991, naming it Durham Area Transit Authority (DATA).

  • 1891-1902 - Durham Street Railway Co.
  • 1902-1913 - Durham Traction Co.
  • 1913-1921 - Durham Traction Co. (Cities Service Co.)
  • 1921-1943 - Durham Public Service Co. (Cities Service Co.)
  • 1930 - streetcars discontinued
  • After 1943 - Duke Power Company

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Triangle Transit Authority from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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