SolTrans

Solano County Transit

SolTrans express bus.
Founded November 16, 2010
Headquarters 311 Sacramento Street, Vallejo, CA
Locale Vallejo and Benicia, California
Service area Solano County, California, Contra Costa County, California
Service type bus service, paratransit
Routes 16
Hubs 1
Stations 3
Operator National Express Group
Website www.soltransride.com

SolTrans, officially Solano County Transit, is a Joint Powers Authority that provides public transportation service to the southern Solano County cities of Vallejo and Benicia. SolTrans was established in 2011 and is the result of a merger between Vallejo Transit and Benicia Breeze.[1]

History

The origins of SolTrans lead back to the early 20th century between two independent bus companies who served southern Solano County. These two companies were eventually acquired by the cities of either of Vallejo or Benicia, before consolidating to become Solano County Transit.

Vallejo Transit

Vallejo Bus Company in the 1920s

The Vallejo Bus Company was founded by Hartley Lowell in 1919. In 1935, the Vallejo Bus Company began to change hands between a number of owners until 1949 when the City of Vallejo took control of it.[2]

However, the Vallejo City Council opted to close it in 1956 due to financial restraints. In response, community leaders led by Senator Luther Gibson created the Vallejo Citizens Transit Corporation (VCTC) in hopes of continuing services in Vallejo. The city subsequently transferred the fleet of thirteen buses to VCTC, who branded it Vallejo Transit Lines on May 1.[3]

Benicia Breeze

The Benicia-Vallejo Stage Line was founded 1915 by Milo Passalacqua. The Stage Line offered a route between Mare Island and Benicia, serving Vallejo's train stations and ferry docks.[2] In 1982, the City of Benicia began operating Benicia Dial-a-Ride, a local demand responsive transit service. Service was later expanded on July 1, 1986 to include a fixed route between Benicia and the Pleasant Hill BART station; this service was called the Benicia Bay Connection. The city also began subsidizing the Benicia-Vallejo Stage Line. On October 1, 1986, the Bay Connection and Stage Line were merged to become Benicia Transit. This new company was managed by Community Transit Services, who were eventually acquired by Laidlaw.[4] During the 1990s, Benicia Transit adds a number of additional routes, such as the Southampton Express (1991-2001) and as a few school tripper routes. It also purchase five used Gillig Phantoms for their main route and begin serving the Martinez Amtrak station between 1994 and 1997, before dedicating a route to it in 2005.

MV Transportation was awarded a contract to operate Benicia Transit in 2000,[4] who would acquire controlling interest in VCTC five years later, transforming it into an MV subsidiary.[3] In 2001, the Benicia Flyer route serving the Southampton hills operated for one year, before being discontinued due to low ridership and replaced with the Benicia Rocket, a route serving the Benicia Industrial Park. By October 2005, all named routes were converted into numbers: the main Vallejo/Pleasant Hill eventually being Route 75; the Amtrak being Route 23, and school trippers being Routes 15 through 18. 2006 saw Benicia Transit being re-branded as Benicia Breeze, replacing its dial-a-ride service into deviated fixed-routes and reducing its school tripper routes to two.[4] Route 75 was eventually retired in favor of Vallejo Transit Route 78, which extends the route to Walnut Creek.[5]

Merger

Discussions of merging the two transit agencies have occurred since 2005, however it wasn't until 2009 when a merger was seriously considered. In August, the Benicia city council reluctantly agreed with representatives of the Solano Transit Authority (STA) to study the possibility of creating a new transit agency with Vallejo Transit, citing the declining ridership and revenue caused by the Great Recession.[5] On November 16, 2010, both cities agreed to enter into a joint powers authority agreement with the STA,[6] calling the new transit agency Solano County Transit (or SolTrans for short). The name was selected out of fifteen others as it opens the possibility of other transit agencies in the county to join the agreement.[7]

In 2013, National Express Transit replaced MV as the contractor.[8]

Services

SolTrans provides local and express bus service to the Solano County cities of Vallejo, Benicia, and Fairfield, California. It also provides express bus service to the Contra Costa County communities of El Cerrito, Pleasant Hill, and Walnut Creek, providing regional connections to BART. SolTrans also provides ADA complementary paratransit within Vallejo and Benicia and General Public Dial a Ride within Benicia.[9]

Ferry service from Vallejo to San Francisco, which was operated by Vallejo Transit, is now provided by San Francisco Bay Ferry, the public operating arm of the San Francisco Bay Area Water Emergency Transportation Authority [WETA].[10]

Connections

SolTrans connects with the following public transit services:

Routes

As of 1 April 2017, SolTrans operates sixteen bus routes: ten local routes operate within the Vallejo/Benicia area, two supplemental school routes operate in Benicia, and four routes provide intercity service.[11]

Route Destination Service notes
1 Broadway Daily service provided
2 Northeast Monday thru Saturday
3 Glen Cove Monday thru Saturday
4 Tuolumne Monday thru Saturday
5 Fairgrounds Monday thru Saturday
6 Tennessee Monday thru Saturday
7 Springs Rd Daily service provided
8 Benicia Road Monday thru Saturday
9 Mare Island Monday thru Saturday
15 Benicia Schools - Rose Dr School days only
17 Benicia Schools - Hastings School days only
20 Columbus Monday thru Friday
78 I-680 Express Daily service provided
80 I-80 Express Daily service provided
82 San Francisco Express Limited weekday service[12]
85 Fairfield Express Monday thru Saturday

Fleet and livery

SolTrans operates a mixed fleet of buses. When SolTrans was fully integrated in 2011, it introduced Gillig Low Floor hybrid buses for local bus service,[13] while the intercity routes continue to use MCI D-4500 buses. SolTrans continues to use a small number of Orion V buses previously used by Vallejo Transit. SolTrans also makes use of small cutaway buses from Starcraft Bus and ElDorado National for Paratransit and Dial-a-ride services. All buses are bicycle and wheelchair accessible.[14]

In 2017, SolTrans introduced two new bus styles and accompanying updated paint scheme: The MCI D4500 fueled by compressed natural gas (CNG); and the BYD K9M full-electric low-floor transit bus.

References

  1. Rohrs, Sarah (26 July 2011). "Huge deficit already saddles merged SolTrans bus system serving Benicia and Vallejo". Vallejo Times Herald. Archived from the original on 26 July 2011. Retrieved 3 August 2011.
  2. 1 2 Kern, James E. (2004). Images of America: Vallejo. Arcadia. p. 80. ISBN 9780738529097.
  3. 1 2 Gile, Lee; Algood, Bob (January 7, 2007). "50 Years of Service". Vallejo Times Herald. ANG Newspapers.
  4. 1 2 3 "Timeline of Benicia Breeze: 1982 to Present" (PDF). City of Benicia. 16 January 2008. pp. VII–G–6. Retrieved 8 June 2013.
  5. 1 2 Burchyns, Tony (24 August 2009). "Benicia fears likely merger of bus systems". Vallejo Times-Herald. Retrieved 28 June 2013.
  6. Weilenman, Donna Beth (18 November 2010). "‘SolTrans’ gets Benicia’s OK". Benicia Herald. Retrieved 28 June 2013.
  7. Weilenman, Donna Beth (4 November 2010). "3-way pact may boost bus funding". Benicia Herald. Retrieved 28 June 2013.
  8. "SolTrans chooses National Express to run buses". Daily Republic. Retrieved 2015-05-25.
  9. "Dial-A-Ride Bus Service". SolTrans. Retrieved 6 February 2015.
  10. SB 976: San Francisco Bay Area Water Emergency Transportation Authority
  11. "Routes". SolTrans. Retrieved 1 April 2017.
  12. http://www.mtc.ca.gov/news/current_topics/8-11/soltrans.htm
  13. Motor Bus Society, Convention Report, Spring 2005. April 18, 2005
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