Parent | City of Visalia Transit Division | ||
---|---|---|---|
Founded | 1981 | ||
Locale | Visalia, California | ||
Service type | Bus service, Dial-a-Ride | ||
Routes | 13 | ||
Hubs | Visalia Transit Center | ||
Daily ridership | 2,000 (weekdays, Q2 2024) [1] | ||
Annual ridership | 538,000 (2023) [2] | ||
Operator | Transdev, soon RATP Dev | ||
Website | visaliatransit | ||
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Visalia Transit is the primary bus agency serving residents and visitors to Visalia, California, the largest city and county seat of Tulare County, California. It is operated by the city through its contractor RATP Dev (replacing Transdev on October 1st, 2024) and offers both fixed routes and dial-a-ride local service within Visalia. In 2023, the system had a ridership of 538,000, or about 2,000 per weekday as of the second quarter of 2024.
Most routes operate out of the central transit center in Downtown Visalia. There are three secondary hubs located on the city's north, west, and south sides. Buses connecting Visalia's central transit hub to nearby census-designated places are handled by the Tulare County Regional Transit Agency including services to Dinuba (Route C10) and Woodlake (Route C30); Route C40 connects the southern hub in Visalia (Government Center) with Tulare and Porterville.
Public transportation in Visalia was initially provided by the Visalia Electric Railroad, which operated streetcars between 1904 and 1924. [3] : 32–33 Local transit operations were taken over by the city of Visalia in 1981, spurred by growth in the city's size and population. The first routes were spokes radiating from a downtown hub; service expansion since then has included newer developments south and west of the original urban core, and routes to outlying communities such as Exeter, Farmersville, and Goshen. [3] : 32–33
The Visalia Towne Trolley service, operating a circulation route in downtown Visalia, started in November 1998. [3] : 32–33 The Towne Trolley was discontinued in September 2017 due to low ridership and were made available for charter service, but low use led the City Council to sell four of the five trolleys in January 2019. [4] [5]
Visalia Transit operates seven days a week, with no service on specific holidays (New Year's Day, Easter, Memorial Day, Independence Day, Thanksgiving, and Christmas) and limited service on other holidays (President's Day, Labor Day, Christmas Eve, and New Year's Eve). The agency serves a population of approximately 138,207 in its 40 square miles (100 km2) service area. [6]
In addition to its fixed-route and dial-a-ride transportation services within Visalia, the city operates two special long-distance routes (V-LINE to Fresno and Sequoia Shuttle to Sequoia National Park), a free intracity shuttle for at-risk youths (LOOP), and maintains The Greenline, where callers may request information about Visalia Transit and other local agencies within Tulare County. The Greenline call center is staffed Monday through Saturday. [7]
Most fixed routes connect to the Visalia Transit Center (VTC) near downtown Visalia; many of these routes connect to secondary hubs on the west (Visalia Medical Clinic), south (Government Center and Sequoia Mall), or north (Orchard Walk/Target Dinuba Road).
No. | Route name | Terminus [upper-alpha 1] | via | Terminus [upper-alpha 2] | Typical headway (minutes) | Notes / Refs. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1A/1B | Mooney | Visalia Transit Center | Mooney Blvd | Government Plaza (TCRTA transfer) | 15 (weekday) 20 (weekend) | [9] [10] |
2A/2B | Caldwell/Court | Court and Caldwell (Kaweah Delta Urgent Care) | Visalia Medical Clinic | 30 | [11] [12] | |
4A/4B | Tulare | Tulare | 30 | [13] [14] | ||
5A/5B | Walnut | Walnut | 30–45 (weekday) 30 (weekend) | [15] [16] | ||
6A/6B | Murray | Houston & Goshen | 60 | [17] | ||
7A/7B | Ferguson | Visalia Medical Clinic | Goshen & Ferguson | Target (Dinuba Rd) | 60 | [18] |
8A/8B | Northeast | Visalia Transit Center | Noble, Lovers Lane, & McAuliff | 30-45 | [19] | |
9A/9B | Exeter – Farmersville | Ben Maddox, McAuliff, & Walnut | Farmersville & Exeter | 45 (weekday) 90 (weekend) | [20] [21] | |
11X | Tulare Express | SR 198 & 99 | Tulare Transit Center | 30 | Jointly operated with TCRTA. [3] : 45 [22] | |
12A/12B | Mooney Orchard | Sequoia Mall | Caldwell & Visalia Pkwy | Farmersville (Roy's Park) | 60 | [23] |
15A/15B | Goshen – Mineral King | Visalia Transit Center | Mineral King/Noble (Visalia Medical Clinic) | Goshen Elementary | 45 | [24] |
16A/16B | Demaree | Sequoia Mall | Demaree & Riggin | North Target | 30 | [25] |
17A/17B | Plaza | Visalia Medical Clinic | Shirk, Riggin, & Plaza (Amazon Facility) | San Joaquin Valley College | 30 | [26] |
Although exact cash fare is required, passes may be purchased at the farebox; change will be provided in the form of a change card, which is valid for one year after it was issued. [27] Visalia offers the Rider Rewards reloadable smart card, available for purchase from the Visalia Transit Center; value may be added to the Rider Rewards card online. Monthly pass users with a Rider Rewards card qualify for discounts from certain local merchants. [28] [27]
Fare collection was temporarily suspended during the COVID-19 pandemic, but has resumed as of February 1, 2021. [6]
Regular | Veterans, Seniors (65+), Disabled, and Medicare | Children (6 & younger) | |
---|---|---|---|
Single Ride | $1.75 | $0.85 | First two free, additional $1.75 each |
All-Day Pass | $3.50 | $2.50 | |
7-Day Pass | $14 | $7.50 | |
Monthly Pass | $50 | $30 | |
Regional T-Pass [lower-alpha 1] | $55 [lower-alpha 2] | — |
Although Visalia Transit connects with Tulare InterModal Express (TIME), Tulare County Area Transit (TCaT), Greyhound, and Kings Area Regional Transit (KART), transfers are accepted without charge from TCaT connections onto VT Route 1 only. [29]
Visalia Transit operates the V-LINE commuter service, connecting Visalia with Fresno. [30]
V-LINE buses depart from the Visalia Transit Center and make stops at the Visalia Municipal Airport (main terminal), Fresno Yosemite International Airport, California State University, Fresno (near Maple & Shaw), and Courthouse Park in downtown Fresno, where riders can transfer to Fresno Area Express, Amtrak, and Greyhound Lines, before returning to Visalia. [31] Typical headways on V-LINE range from 120 to 240 minutes. V-LINE is operated seven days a week with the exception of certain holidays (New Year's Day, Easter, Memorial Day, Independence Day, Thanksgiving Day, and Christmas Day). [32] V-LINE passengers may park for free at the Visalia Airport for up to ten days. [33] [34] The route charges a premium fare. As of February 2023 [update] , a one-way ride is $10 for the general public and $9 for qualified riders (students, seniors, disabled, and military veterans); multiple-ride "punch passes" are available, bringing per-ride costs down to $7 and $6 (for 40 prepaid rides), respectively. [35]
Visalia Transit operates the seasonal Sequoia Shuttle service, connecting Visalia with Sequoia National Park via Exeter, Three Rivers, and Lemon Cove. [36]
The Sequoia Shuttle takes passengers to the Foothills Visitor Center and Giant Forest Monument in Sequoia National Park, where they may transfer to the park's internal shuttles. [5] Due to the narrow roads to the park, Sequoia Shuttle buses are limited to 16 passengers, and reservations must be booked no later than 5 AM the day of travel as a result. [37] The fare for Sequoia Shuttle is $20 for a round-trip, [36] as approved by the Visalia City Council in 2019; it was the first fare increase since it was raised to $15 in 2008. [5] The shuttles were canceled for the 2020 and 2021 seasons because of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic in California. [38]
Fleet no. (Qty) | Year | Mfr | Model | Length | Fuel | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Fixed-route fleet | ||||||
6267–6276 (10) | 2008 | Orion | VII | 35' | CNG | |
6283–6286 (4) | 2009 | 40' | ||||
6287–6289 (3) | 35' | |||||
6292–6293 (2) | 2009 | |||||
1301–1304 (4) | 2013 | Gillig | BRT Plus | 40' | ||
1601–1607 (7) | 2016 | |||||
1801–1803 (3) | 2018 | Proterra | Catalyst | 40' | Battery electric | |
2101–2104 (4) | 2021 | 35' | ||||
Trolley fleet | ||||||
1829; 1874 (2) | 2013 | Freightliner / StarTrans | Supreme Classic | ? | CNG | 22 seats |
Sequoia Shuttle fleet | ||||||
6257–6259 (3) | 2004 | Gillig | Low Floor | 35' | Diesel | 31 seats |
106–113 (8) | 2007 | Ford / Starcraft | AllStar | ? | Gasoline | 16 seats |
114–115 (2) | 2008 | 16 seats | ||||
116–117 (2) | 2009 | 16 seats | ||||
1201–1204 (4) | 2012 | Gillig | BRT | 35' | Diesel-electric hybrid | 31 seats |
1205–1206 (2) | 29' | 26 seats | ||||
118–119 (2) | 2013 | Ford / A-Z Buses | cutaway | ? | Gasoline | 16 seats |
120 (1) | 2015 | Ford / Starcraft | AllStar | ? | Gasoline | 20 seats |
121–126 (6) | 2013 | Ford / Glaval | cutaway | ? | Gasoline | 16 seats |
1820–1821 (2) | 2018 | Gillig | BRT | 29' | Diesel-electric hybrid | |
V-LINE fleet | ||||||
1501–1503 (3) | 2016 | Starcraft | AllStar | ? | CNG | 20 seats |
1930–1931 (2) | 2019 | Gillig | BRT Plus | 40' |
The downtown Visalia Transit Center is at 425 E Oak Ave. Additional transfer points exist in the north (near the Orchard Walk shopping center), east (Ben Maddox and E Walnut), south (Sequoia Mall), and west (Visalia Medical Clinic). [3] : 55–56
Tulare County is a county located in the U.S. state of California. As of the 2020 census, the population was 473,117. The county seat is Visalia. The county is named for Tulare Lake, once the largest freshwater lake west of the Great Lakes. Drained for agricultural development, the site is now in Kings County, which was created in 1893 from the western portion of the formerly larger Tulare County.
Visalia is a city in the agricultural San Joaquin Valley of California. The population was 141,384 as per the 2020 census. Visalia is the fifth-largest city in the San Joaquin Valley, the 40th most populous in California, and 192nd in the United States. As the county seat of Tulare County, Visalia serves as the economic and governmental center to one of the most productive agricultural counties in the country.
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Visalia Municipal Airport is five miles west of downtown Visalia, in Tulare County, California, United States. The airport is eligible for the Essential Air Service program, but has no scheduled air service, and is not eligible to request funding for service until April 30, 2026.
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Porterville Transit (PT) is the primary transit authority serving residents and visitors to Porterville, the second-largest city in Tulare County, California. It was operated by the city and offered both fixed routes and dial-a-ride local service within Porterville, with all fixed routes operating out of a central transit center. Buses connecting Porterville's transit hub to nearby census-designated places were handled by Tulare County Area Transit (TCaT), including services to Tulare and Visalia, Springville, Terra Bella (80), and Poplar and Woodville (90).
Tulare County Area Transit (TCaT) was the county-operated bus agency providing service between cities and local community circulator routes in Tulare County, California; transit within the larger cities was provided by agencies operated by those communities, including Dinuba (DART), Porterville (Porterville Transit), Tulare (TIME), and Visalia (Visalia Transit); connections are provided to Delano (DART) in neighboring Kern County.
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Kings Area Regional Transit is the primary bus service serving residents and visitors to the cities of Avenal, Hanford, and Lemoore in Kings County, California. KART is the branded service operated by the Kings County Area Public Transit Agency (KCAPTA) since June 1980; KCAPTA has contracted with MV Transportation to provide operations and maintenance for KART. It provides both intracity routes within and intercity routes between those three cities; in addition, it provides routes serving rural communities within Kings County as well as commuter routes connecting to Fresno Area Express in Fresno and Visalia Transit in Visalia.
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