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Spokane Transit Authority

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Spokane Transit Authority
File:Spokane Transit Authority logo.svg
A 60-foot New Flyer Xcelsior articulated bus at the STA Plaza in July 2021
FormerlySpokane Transit System
FoundedMarch 10, 1981; 43 years ago[1][2]
(as the Spokane Transit Authority for Regional Transportation (START))[3]
Headquarters1230 W. Boone Ave. Spokane, WA 99201
LocaleSpokane County, Washington (service planned to be extended to the Coeur d'Alene Metropolitan area, in 2025)[4]
Service area248 square miles (642 km2)
Routes43
DestinationsAirway Heights, Cheney, Medical Lake, Millwood, Liberty Lake, Spokane, Spokane Valley, unincorporated areas of Spokane County
FleetBuses: 148, Paratransit Vans: 118, Vanpool Vans: 111
Daily ridership36,000 (weekdays, Q2 2024)[5]
Annual ridership9,215,700 (2023)[6]
Fuel typeDiesel (with some hybrid electric vehicles), and battery electric
Chief executiveE. Susan Meyer
Websitespokanetransit.com

Spokane Transit Authority, more commonly Spokane Transit or STA, is the public transport authority of central Spokane County, Washington, United States, serving Spokane, Washington, and its surrounding urban areas. In 2023, the system had a ridership of 9,215,700, or about 36,000 per weekday as of the second quarter of 2024.

Originally conceived in 1980, and authorized by voters on March 10, 1981,[3] STA provides public transportation within the Spokane County Public Transportation Benefit Area (PBTA). As of 2020, STA serves a population of approximately 459,000 [7] across 248 square miles (640 km2) including the cities of Spokane, Spokane Valley, Cheney, Liberty Lake, Airway Heights, Medical Lake, the Town of Millwood, and unincorporated areas between and around those cities.

It began operating service in 1981 after acquiring the assets of the city-operated Spokane Transit System. The agency can trace its roots to a number of private transit operators extending back to 1888. While the 98th largest metropolitan area in the United States, Spokane ranks 20th in transit ridership per capita using 2019 ridership data.[8]

Services

An STA Vanpool vehicle

Spokane Transit provides multiple services:

  • Fixed Route Bus Service. Spokane Transit operates 43 bus routes throughout its service area on published schedules.[9] Most routes run 365 days a year. Additionally, STA operates routes during major community events such as the Lilac Bloomsday Run.
  • Paratransit. Pursuant to the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, Spokane Transit provides accessible transportation to persons with disabilities within 34 mile (1 km) of every fixed route.
  • Vanpool. A service which matches people traveling to or from similar locations and provides a publicly owned van at a fixed price per mile.

Fixed routes

Most of Spokane Transit's bus routes run through The Plaza in Downtown Spokane.

Spokane Transit has 43 fixed routes operating year-round on published schedules. Routes are numbered to reflect service class by the number of digits as described in the table below. Key geography is reflected in the first digit of regular service, while numbering of target service with triple reflects key markets and underlying geography through the combination of digits.

Major Service Classes[10]
Service Class Description Numbering
High Performance Transit (HPT) Service Full-time service operating in two directions. Spontaneous travel is supported by the relatively high frequency of service. The HPT routes are in major corridors where there is sufficient ridership to justify significant investments in passenger amenities. Includes "Urban" and "Regional" configurations. Single Digits (e.g. 4, 6)
Regular Service General-purpose service that is intended to be sufficient to meet general demand that exists in an area served while still being robust enough to meet many purposes throughout each day. It includes multiple service families, including frequent, standard, basic and downtown shuttles. Double digits (e.g. 12, 61)
Targeted Service Routes tailored to serve a specific commute market or destinations on a limited basis, typically with limited or express stop patterns. Such routes typically, but not exclusively, operate one way in a given peak period. Also includes shuttles for special events, interim worksite connections, and supplementary connections and is tailored to the specific circumstances. Triple digits (e.g. 124, 662)

Routes have distinct weekday, Saturday and Sunday schedule patterns. Major holidays operate on a Sunday schedule.[11]

Bus rapid transit

As of 2021, Spokane Transit is developing two bus rapid transit lines within the region as part of its planned High Performance Transit network. The first line, the City Line, is currently under construction with a scheduled opening in July 2023 and will traverse from east–west through Downtown Spokane and the University District, running between the Browne's Addition neighborhood and the Spokane Community College Transit Center.

A second line, with a working project name of Division BRT, is currently in design and planned to run north–south through Spokane along Division Street, with a goal of starting construction in 2025 and commencing service in 2027.[12]

Passenger facilities and amenities

Bus stop signage
Basic curbside stop
People waiting at a bus stop
Bus shelter stop with trash can
Three typical formats of Spokane Transit Authority bus stops, featuring different levels of passenger and transit operation amenities. All stops feature a sign denoting the routes serving the stop, along with their terminus, as well as a unique stop identification number used for STA's real-time bus tracking information.

Transit Centers

Spokane Transit operates four transit centers as of May 2020:[13]

Bus Stops

At the end of 2020, Spokane Transit served 1,610 bus stops throughout its service area.[14]

Park and Ride Lots

The Jefferson Street Park and Ride lot under an Interstate 90 overpass

Spokane Transit operates a total of 14 park-and-ride facilities throughout its service area, several of which are operated through cooperative agreements with other property owners to allow parking access to transit services.[15]

Bicycle Accommodation

All fixed routes have buses with racks that can fit three bikes on the exterior of the bus. Most park and ride lots feature bike lockers that can be rented on a monthly basis.


Fares and passes

Fare structure

(As of October 2022)

Type Standard Fare Daily Fare Capping Monthly Fare Capping
Standard $2.00 $4.00 $60.00
Paratransit $2.00 $4.00 $60.00
Honored Rider
Seniors 60 and older and individuals with disabilities
(Honored Rider card required)
$1.00 $2.00 $30.00
Stars and Stripes
Active-duty military personnel and veterans
(Stars and Stripes card required)
$1.00 $2.00 $30.00
Student
Ages 19 or old
(Honored Rider Card required)
$1.00 $2.00 $30.00
Youth
Ages 6–18 years old
(Rider's License or equivalent institutional card required)
zero-fare zero-fare zero-fare
Children
5 and under
children must be accompanied
free free free

As of October 2022, the standard fare costs $2.00 and permits the rider to board any route for a period of two hours from initial purchase or validation on the bus. On October 1, 2022, Spokane Transit inaugurated a new accounted-based fare collection system, known as the Connect fare system. The fare system includes online account management, a smart card known as the Connect card, and a mobile app, STA Connect. The new system caps fares collected on a daily and monthly basis and includes several discount programs . A "Rider's License" allows youth ages 6-18 to ride with zero fare.[16] Traditional fareboxes remain on all fixed route coaches, allowing riders to pay with cash or older media as described below.

Fare media

Examples of STA magnetic stripe fare cards. The green card (left) is a paper card issued upon purchase of a fare on board a bus. The orange card (right) is a plastic pre-purchased fare card that can be activated upon boarding a bus; other color coded pre-purchased passes such as monthly or day passes are also available.[17]

As of 2021, fares on Spokane Transit can be paid in cash, or with pre-paid passes and transfers programmed to magnetic stripe cards or RFID smart cards. The current fare payment platform went live on December 4, 2006, after a brief transition period from December 1 through December 3, 2006 that saw a system-wide wavier of bus fares as new fare boxes were being installed. STA's prior system, while also accepting cash, utilized paper transfers and metal coin tokens.[18]


Pass programs

Spokane Transit provides multiple fare instruments, including employee, youth, and college passes. Additionally, organizations may participate in the Universal Transit Access Pass (UTAP) program with a "utility charge" for each ride taken by eligible participants.[19] Spokane Transit currently maintains UTAP contracts with Eastern Washington University, Washington State University Spokane, Community Colleges of Spokane, Whitworth University, Gonzaga University and the University of Washington School of Medicine in Spokane (via Gonzaga University); City of Spokane for employees and elected officials; and, Spokane County for employees and elected officials.

Governance

Spokane Transit is governed by a board of directors which includes nine positions filled by elected officials who must be appointed by the municipal jurisdictions that form the agency, and one position appointed by the Board upon recommendation by the labor organizations representing the public transportation employees within the local public transportation system pursuant to state law.[20]

Originally, the board consisted of 2 members from the City of Spokane, 2 members from the Spokane County Commission, 1 member from each of the Cities of Airway Heights, Cheney, Medical Lake, and the Town of Millwood, and one additional member alternately held by an official from the City of Spokane and Spokane County.

The City of Liberty Lake was incorporated in August 2001, and the City of Spokane Valley was incorporated in March 2003, necessitating a change in board membership. Now the board consists of:

  • City of Spokane, 3 members
  • Spokane County, 2 members
  • City of Spokane Valley, 2 members
  • The small cities, 2 members (combined)
  • Labor representative, 1 member (non-voting)

Fixed route fleet

As of January 2022,[21] Spokane Transit has 167 buses in its fleet. Included in the fleet are:

Make/Model Length Seats Year Quantity Fleet Notes
New Flyer D60LF 60' 62 2007 6 2661-2666
2009 4 2961-2964
61-foot New Flyer Xcelsior bus, for Spokane Transit Authority New Flyer Xcelsior 61' 62 2017 3 1761–1763 Delivered with BRT options including integrated roofline and flush windows
2018 7 1861–1867 Delivered with BRT options including 3rd set of doors, integrated roofline, and flush windows
Gillig Low Floor 29' 26 2003 3 2333; 2335-2336 Special livery for "Downtown Shuttle" (Routes 11 and 12)
Gillig Low Floor 35' 32 2007 3 2701-2703
Gillig Low Floor 40' 39 2006 19 2601-2619
2007 14 2704-2717
2008 14 2801-2814
2009 9 2901-2909
2014 8 1401–1408
2016 7 1601–1607
2018 6 1801–1806
2019 6 1901–1906
2021 16 2101-2116
Gillig HEV 40' 39 2007 3 7001-7003
2008 6 8001-8006
2010 10 10701-10710
2012 6 12701-12706
Gillig HEV 29' 26 2009 3 9031-9033 Special livery for "Downtown Shuttle" (Routes 11 and 12)
New Flyer Xcelsior CHARGE 60' TBD 2021 10 E6001-E6010 Dedicated-use for City Line bus rapid transit operations. Special livery consisting of a black-to-lilac linear gradient design.
New Flyer Xcelsior CHARGE 40' TBD 2021 2 E4001-E4002
Proterra ZX5 40' TBD 2021 2[22] E4003-E4004
Future Fleet
New Flyer Xcelsior 40' 42 2022 10 TBD


History

Spokane and Inland Empire Railroad in Spokane, Washington, USA in 1912.

1880s–1970s: Predecessors

Transit history in the Spokane area dates back more than 130 years beginning with the inaugural trip of a horse-drawn streetcar running between downtown Spokane and the Browne's Addition neighborhood to the west in 1888.[23] The first electrically powered streetcar began operations November 1889 and traveled between downtown Spokane through what is now the University District.[24] Over the next several decades, multiple private interests constructed and operated streetcars and cable cars typically as an integral part of a real estate development plan.

By 1896, the leading streetcar system was the Spokane Street Railway Company, with 23 miles of railway. Its network of lines was described as a "cartwheel" that emanated from a "hub" at the intersection of Riverside Avenue and Howard Street in downtown Spokane.[25]

By 1910, streetcar lines were owned and operated by two competing companies: Washington Water Power and Spokane Traction Company. In addition to urban street railways, each company had interests in electric Interurban lines that stretched as far away as Moscow, Idaho. In that year, streetcar and interurban ridership peaked at 37.98 million rides.[26]

The decade following 1910 was a time of intense competition for the streetcars, with growing automobile ownership and private jitneys that threatened the viability of a divided transit system. By the end of the decade, Spokane Traction Company fell into receivership and underwent reorganizations that were unsuccessful in returning the system to profitability. In 1922, Spokane citizens overwhelmingly voted to amend the city charter to reduce taxes and other special assessments imposed on streetcar operations and infrastructure, enabling the formation of a unified streetcar system featuring "universal transfers" between lines and empowering the company to convert some lines to trolleybuses on its own discretion.[27][28] Following the successful measure, the Spokane United Railway Company was formed as a subsidiary to Washington Water Power (later, Avista Corporation), creating a unified electric streetcar system.

The street railway system was gradually phased out through the 1930s to make way for motorized coaches. Bus ridership reached a peak in the Spokane area in 1946 with 26 million passengers. The system was purchased by Spokane City Lines Company (part of National City Lines) in 1945, and later turned over to the City of Spokane in 1968. Upon acquisition by the city, funding for the system was derived from a $1 household tax.[29]

1980s: Reorganization into regional system

In 1980, a municipal corporation was created to administer mass transit services for a new public transportation benefit area (PTBA). The new PTBA represented a shift in funding and operational model of Spokane Transit System from a city model to a regional model. Due to rapid inflation in the late 1970s and early 1980s, the flat $1 city tax on households that had funded Spokane Transit System was no longer keeping up with the rising costs of its era. The household tax model had another major disadvantage; because the tax depended on the quantity of households within the tax boundaries, its revenues would only increase with the construction of new households. Meanwhile, most residential growth was occurring outside Spokane city limits. Furthermore, the flat tax on households had been viewed by some as a very regressive tax.[29]

An election was held on March 10, 1981, to determine the future of public transportation in the Spokane region. The election measure, which passed and was subsequently implemented the following month of April 1981, replaced the $1 tax on households within Spokane city limits with a 0.3% sales tax to be applied throughout the public transportation benefit area. The shift in the transit agency's funding and administrative model was not isolated to Spokane. Many other cities and regions in Washington state including the cities of Vancouver and Tacoma, as well as King County, Pierce County, Snohomish County, and Clark County had already shifted from a city household tax model to a county-wide transit system funded by sales tax.[29]

In addition to adapting its funding model to reflect the current economic times, the shift to a regional model allowed the transit agency to heavily increase bus service to areas beyond Spokane city limits. Prior to the election, service outside city limits was scarce, despite the areas already falling within the public transportation benefit area.[29]

The restructured system operated under three branches; Spokane Transit Authority for Regional Transportation (START) was the administrative body, the Spokane Transit System (STS) name remained for the fixed route bus operation, and Spokane Area Special Transportation Agency (SASTA) operated the paratransit services. The three names were unified about one and half years later in September 1982 under the Spokane Transit Authority name and brand.[30] The name change officially took effect on September 23, 1982, after the START Board passed a resolution renaming the municipal corporation to Spokane Transit Authority.[31]

1990s

At the urging of the downtown business community, Spokane Transit built a transit center in 1995 to replace the historic Howard and Riverside hub which required that buses park along many downtown streets for passengers to make transfers. Not only was this uncomfortable for passengers, who were forced to wait for buses in the weather, but it also made the streetside businesses less accessible to customers. The bus center, known as "The Plaza" was constructed as an indoor urban park at a cost of approximately $20 million including property acquisition costs. With its high, daylight ceiling, imported Italian tile, and cougar statues leaping over a waterfall between the up- and down- escalators, it generated great controversy.

In September 1998, Spokane Transit implemented a major revision of the bus network, the largest change to the bus network in 17 years. Routes were consolidated to provide more frequency on busy corridors and all route numbers were revised, primarily according to geography.[32]

In addition to the local sales tax, a major revenue source was Washington State's motor vehicle excise tax which provided matching funds. After statewide initiative I-695 was passed in 1999, the legislature eliminated the matching funds even though the initiative was later found unconstitutional.

2000s

The period after the elimination of the motor vehicle excise tax was a time of unprecedented change for Spokane Transit. As its undesignated cash reserves balance fell, Spokane Transit attempted to increase its tax authority from 0.3% to 0.6% in September 2002, but it was rejected by voters 48% to 52%.

Spokane Transit created task force to study changes that could be made to regain the support of the community, while simultaneously preparing for a potential 40% service decrease. After increased public participation, and 69% voter approval, Spokane Transit increased the sales tax from 0.3% to 0.6% in October 2004, subject to a sunset of the tax in 2009. In May 2008, voters reauthorized the additional 0.3% sales tax with no sunset clause.

SRTC and STA jointly created the Light Rail Steering Committee (LRSC) in early 2000 which was responsible for studying the creation of a light rail corridor from downtown Spokane to Liberty Lake. This effort was preceded by significant study by the SRTC. In 2006 the committee published a Draft Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS) which evaluated several rail and bus alternatives for the corridor. The committee stated preference for a single-track rail corridor using diesel multiple units (DMU) that would cost less than half the conventional light rail system. The travel demand modeling performed as part of the DEIS forecast less than 3,500 daily boardings on the 15.5-mile system in 2025. An advisory vote in 2006 elicited a negative response to continued planning and investment in the light rail project.

In 2008, transit consultants Nelson-Nygaard Associates recommended changes to transit operations downtown while retaining the use of the Plaza transfer facility.

2010s

Spokane Transit adopted a new comprehensive plan, Connect Spokane, in June 2010, to guide system planning and growth. The plan calls for a network of high performance transit with frequent service connecting key neighborhoods and activity centers throughout the region.[33]

In response to a significant decline in sales tax revenue resulting from the Great Recession, Spokane Transit undertook service reductions in 2010 and 2011.[34] Despite the cuts, ridership increased, reaching an all-time high for Spokane Transit Authority in 2014, with 11.3 million passengers on its fixed route system.[35]

In 2016, voters approved an increase in the sale tax dedicated to public transit to implement the STA Moving Forward plan.[36] The plan called for more and better service, new connection facilities, include new transit centers and stations, and investments in six high performance transit lines.

In 2018, Spokane Transit opened the West Plains Transit Center, an investment of the STA Moving Forward plan.[37] The addition of the transit center allows passengers between the cities of Cheney, Medical Lake and Airway Heights to travel between those cities without transferring in Spokane at the STA Plaza. As part of the 2018 changes, STA also increased frequency on service to the West Central neighborhood, introduced larger buses on North Division Street and introduced a new express route to the Valley Transit Center.

2020s

Like public transport agencies across the globe, STA was significantly impacted by the COVID-19 Pandemic. Fixed route ridership dropped from 9.97 million passenger boardings in 2019 to 5.24 million passenger boardings in 2021.[38] STA's ridership began to recover in 2022, with May 2022 experiencing a year-over-year increase of 29.6% on fixed route, 38.7% on Paratransit and 37.0% increase on Vanpool.[39]

Planned developments

Spokane Transit participates in regional transportation and land use planning activities. It is a member jurisdiction of the Spokane Regional Transportation Council (SRTC), and sends a member of its board to serve on SRTC's board.

High Performance Transit Network

A City Line bus rapid transit station under construction in July 2021.

In 2010, STA developed a preliminary proposal for what it calls a "High Performance Transit Network" (HPTN) composed of 14 corridors of premium all-day frequent transit service. The preliminary proposal does not specify the operating modes for each corridor but suggests that the corridors will operate at a speed appropriate to the access provided and urban characteristics of the operating environment. The HPTN vision is an element of the agency's proposed comprehensive plan, referred to as "Connect Spokane."

Also in 2010, STA and the City of Spokane initiated an alternatives analysis to study transit improvements in and around the downtown core. This "central city transit alternatives analysis" will look at "High Performance Transit" improvements that can be made to increase mobility and stimulate in-fill development. The timeline for the study calls for a "locally preferred alternative" to be determined by early 2011.

In 2016, the central city transit plan took the form as the Central City Line project, later named the City Line, a bus rapid transit line that is planned to open in 2023. It will be the first phase of a number of high performance transit lines in Spokane and is the region's first bus rapid transit corridor.[40]

The future Division Street BRT, running from downtown Spokane to the north end of the city, would be the second BRT corridor in the area.[41] In March 2022, the Washington State Transportation Budget passed to accelerate the timeline of the North Spokane Corridor (NSC) freeway by two years, from 2029 opening to 2027. While STA had planned to launch the new route of 60-foot articulating electric buses in 2029 along with the NSC, the state budget also allocated $50 million to get the Division Street bus rapid transit route started early.[42]

References

  1. ^ Sher, Jeff (March 11, 1982). "Bus plans win". The Spokesman-Review. Retrieved May 9, 2021.
  2. ^ "Spokane Transit Celebrates 35th Anniversary". Spokane Transit Authority. March 10, 2016. Retrieved May 9, 2021.
  3. ^ a b Spokane Transit Authority for Regional Transportation Board of Directors (March 12, 1981). "Resolution No. 17-81". Washington State Archives, Digital Archives. Retrieved May 9, 2021.
  4. ^ "STA Moving Forward – Post Falls and Coeur d'Alene – High Performance Transit". Spokane Transit Authority. Retrieved 2020-04-21.
  5. ^ "Transit Ridership Report Second Quarter 2024" (PDF). American Public Transportation Association. September 3, 2024. Retrieved September 5, 2024.
  6. ^ "Transit Ridership Report Fourth Quarter 2023" (PDF). American Public Transportation Association. March 4, 2024. Retrieved September 5, 2024.
  7. ^ "2019 Public Transportation Benefit Area (PTBA) Population Estimates" (PDF). State Of Washington Office of Financial Management. 2019. Retrieved 2022-07-23.
  8. ^ "APTA Public Transportation Ridership Report Fourth Quarter 2019" (PDF). American Public Transportation Association. 2020. Retrieved 2022-08-14.
  9. ^ "STA Routes/Schedules". Spokane Transit Authority. Retrieved 21 April 2020.
  10. ^ "Connect Spokane Fixed Route Policies" (PDF). Spokane Transit Authority. Retrieved 23 July 2022.
  11. ^ "STA Holiday Information". Spokane Transit Authority. Retrieved 21 April 2020.
  12. ^ McDermott, Ted (February 8, 2021). "Getting There: Dedicated bus rapid transit lanes on Division? Planners push to make it happen, fast". The Spokesman-Review. Retrieved May 9, 2021.
  13. ^ "Transit Development Plan: 2021–2026" (PDF). Spokane Transit Authority. Spokane Transit Authority Board of Directors. September 17, 2020. p. 7. Retrieved May 9, 2021.
  14. ^ "Annual Route and Passenger Facilities Performance Report – 2020 Data" (PDF). Spokane Transit Authority. Retrieved 2021-02-17.
  15. ^ "Park & Ride Locations". Spokane Transit Authority. Retrieved April 25, 2021.
  16. ^ "Store". Spokane Transit Authority. Retrieved October 5, 2022.
  17. ^ "Store". Spokane Transit Authority. Retrieved October 10, 2021.
  18. ^ Cannata, Amy (October 20, 2006). "Cards, 2-hour bus passes to replace tokens, transfers". The Spokesman-Review. Retrieved October 10, 2021.
  19. ^ "Annual Route Report, 2012 Operating Data" (PDF). Spokanetransit.com. pp. 15–17. Retrieved 2014-02-07.
  20. ^ "RCW 36.57A.050: Governing body — Selection, qualification, number of members — Travel expenses, compensation". Apps.leg.wa.gov. 2008-07-01. Retrieved 2014-02-07.
  21. ^ "Vehicles". Spokane Transit Authority. Retrieved March 2, 2022.
  22. ^ "Minutes of the September 2, 2020, Special STA Board Workshop" (PDF). Spokane Transit Authority. Retrieved 8 May 2021.
  23. ^ Kershner, Jim (2007-01-29). "the Free Online Encyclopedia of Washington State History". HistoryLink.org. Retrieved 2014-02-07.
  24. ^ Kershner, Jim (2007-01-25). "the Free Online Encyclopedia of Washington State History". HistoryLink.org. Retrieved 2014-02-07.
  25. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2022-04-05. Retrieved 2016-09-25.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  26. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2022-04-05. Retrieved 2016-09-25.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  27. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2022-04-05. Retrieved 2016-09-25.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  28. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2022-04-05. Retrieved 2016-09-25.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  29. ^ a b c d Tabor, Brenda (2 March 1981). "Mass Transit: Election will decide course of bus system". The Spokesman-Review. Retrieved 21 August 2016.
  30. ^ "New Name, New Routes, New Service!". The Spokesman-Review. 1 September 1982. Retrieved 21 August 2016.
  31. ^ Spokane Transit Authority for Regional Transportation, Board of Directors (September 23, 1982). "Resolution No. 105-82". Washington State Archives, Digital Archives. Retrieved May 9, 2021.
  32. ^ "Routed Out: New streamlined STA bus routes leave some riders feeling out of the loop". The Spokesman-Review. 3 September 1998.
  33. ^ "Connect Spokane – a comprehensive plan for public transportation" (PDF). www.spokanetransit.com. Spokane Transit Authority. Retrieved 7 May 2021.
  34. ^ "STA board eliminates to bus routes". The Spokesman-Review. 17 June 2010.
  35. ^ "STA reports record ridership in 2014". The Spokesman-Review. 9 January 2015.
  36. ^ "Voters approve Prop 1 to fund STA upgrades, Central City Line". The Spokesman-Review. 8 November 2016.
  37. ^ "Bus service expanding in Spokane as STA opens new transit center". The Spokesman-Review. 15 September 2018.
  38. ^ "2023-2028 Transit Development Plan" (PDF). www.spokanetransit.com. Spokane Transit Authority. Retrieved 23 July 2022.
  39. ^ "STA Board Meeting July 21, 2022 Packet" (PDF). www.spokanetransit.com. Spokane Transit Authority. Retrieved 23 July 2022.
  40. ^ "Central City Line". Spokane Transit Authority. Retrieved 16 February 2018.
  41. ^ Marc. "Division Street BRT". Spokane Transit Authority. Retrieved 2022-07-17.
  42. ^ "Gov. Inslee signs $16B transportation package, sending millions to Spokane". KXLY. 2022-03-25. Retrieved 2022-07-17.
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