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In the 1920's buses began to replace streetcars, and the last streetcar ran on May 31, 1930. In 1933, Oshkosh City Lines, Inc. assumed operation of urban buses in Oshkosh and in 1962 City Transit Lines took over operations. [1] City-owned Oshkosh Transit Service began in 1978, following the takeover of the struggling private City Transit Lines.
Valley Transit is a city bus and paratransit commission operated by the city government of Appleton, Wisconsin. It has operated as a bus system since 1930, and has been fully operated by the city since 1978.
Oshkosh is also served by the GO Transit (formerly Oshkosh Transit System), which runs nine fixed-route bus routes throughout the city from 6:15 am until 6:45 pm Monday through Saturday. One of these routes also connects Oshkosh with Neenah, Wisconsin , and the Fox Cities' transit system, Valley Transit .
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GO Expansion, [5] previously known as GO Regional Express Rail (RER), [6] is a project to improve GO Transit train service by adding all-day, two-way service to the inner portions of the Barrie line, Kitchener line and the Stouffville line, and by increasing frequency of train service on various lines to every 15 minutes or better on five of the corridors.
Go-Pass: Saskatoon Transit: 1 February 2010 St. John's: m-Card: St. John's Transportation Commission (Metrobus) December 2006 Greater Toronto: PRESTO: Brampton Transit, Burlington Transit, Durham Region Transit, GO Transit, MiWay, Oakville Transit, Toronto Transit Commission, Union Pearson Express, York Region Transit: 2007 Hamilton: Hamilton ...
OSHKOSH ― The city is doing what it can to keep its older residents on their feet. All senior Oshkosh residents now have access to a free fall prevention app after the city’s fire department ...
At least a third of Oshkosh’s 21,500 water service lines are still yet to be identified as the Department of Public Works hopes to have all the city’s lead pipes replaced by 2025.