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NJ Transit riders used to be able to track real-time bus info, but glitches in the agency's data caused that info to stop working on some apps.
NJ Transit Bus Operations is the bus division of NJ Transit, providing bus service throughout New Jersey along with service along with the Newark Light Rail service. Many of the agency's bus routes travel over state lines to New York City or Philadelphia. In 2023, the bus system had a ridership of 131,253,500.
NJ Transit operates or contracts out the following bus routes, all of which originate from Newark, Jersey City, Hoboken, or Elizabeth. Many were once streetcar lines. These routes are operated from garages in NJ Transit's Northern and Central Divisions, or by Community Transportation under contract.
6400 (top) on Route 24E (NJT's new route) to Jersey Gardens. 6524 (bottom) on Route 24B (ONE Bus route).The 24 Elizabeth/Jersey Gardens-Orange/Erie Loop is a bus route operated by New Jersey Transit in the U.S. state of New Jersey, operating through Orange, Elizabeth, and Newark.
New bus routes, 12 in all, and new schedules have been relaunched. Riders can view the routes on the new JTRAN app.
Combination of former Maplewood Equipment Company routes 6 and 10, and Transport of New Jersey route 61; Fairview; Meadowlands; 156R Englewood Cliffs: Port Imperial, River Road, Gorge Road, Palisade Avenue, GWB Plaza, Sylvan Avenue: Weekday Rush Hours and Saturdays Only; Select trips short turn at GWB Plaza in Fort Lee. No Sunday service.
Across NJ Transit's system of 263 bus routes, its daily weekday boardings for October was about 480,000, up 14% since August, when it was 421,000, according to data provided by Michael Kilcoyne ...
A Pennsylvania Railroad class GG1 train, built for the Pennsylvania Railroad in the 1930s–1940s, hauls a commuter train into South Amboy station in 1981. NJT was founded on July 17, 1979, an offspring of the New Jersey Department of Transportation (NJDOT), mandated by the state government to address many then-pressing transportation problems. [5]