Wikipedia
The C-Tran (stylized as C-TRAN), more formally the Clark County Public Transit Benefit Area Authority, is a public agency serving Clark County, Washington, United States, including the cities of Battle Ground, Camas, Vancouver and Washougal. Founded in 1981, C-Tran operates regular route bus services within Clark County, as well as Dial-A-Ride services for qualified persons with disabilities (C-Van) and a reserved, on-demand service in eastern Clark County (The Connector). C-Tran also provides express commuter services between Clark County and various points in Portland, Oregon, including downtown, the Parkrose-Sumner and Delta Park MAX Light Rail stations (in northeast and north Portland), Lloyd District, and Oregon Health and Science University.
C-Tran operates three transit centers: Vancouver Mall at Westfield Vancouver, Fisher's Landing in east county, and 99th Street at Stockford Village, as well as three park and rides: Salmon Creek, Evergreen Park, and Andresen. 28 transit routes operate to serve the approximately 350,000 residents of Clark County, while C-Tran's 111 transit coaches and 50 paratransit coaches travel over 14,472 miles daily.
The Clayton County C-TRAN was a bus transportation system in Clayton County, Georgia that ran from 2001 to 2010. C-Tran was run by the Georgia Regional Transportation Authority (GRTA) to manage the local bus system, linking bus routes to MARTA, the Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, and major commercial and academic centers in the county. C-Tran's bus fleet was powered by compressed natural gas. Due to budget shortfalls, C-Tran ended service on March 31, 2010.
C-TRAN or C-Tran refers to any of three different public transit systems in the United States:
- C-Tran (Washington) in Clark County, Washington ( Vancouver)
- C-TRAN (Georgia) in Clayton County, Georgia ( Atlanta area)
- C-TRAN (North Carolina) in Wake County, North Carolina ( Research Triangle)
C-TRAN is the public transportation provider in Cary, a community in the Research Triangle urbanized area in North Carolina. While the city of Raleigh provides service to most of the county via Capital Area Transit, Cary opted to retain its own town-owned system. Raleigh, Durham, Chapel Hill, Cary, and Wake Forest, the five cities that constitute the region, are connected by Triangle Transit. Fixed-route service operates Monday through Saturday from 6 a.m. to 10 p.m. As part of the GoTransit branding initiative for the Triangle, C-Tran will change its name to GoCary in October 2016.