BWG Transit is a public transit service managed by the town of Bradford West Gwillimbury in Simcoe County, Ontario, Canada. It is operated by Switzer-Carty Transportation. It functions as the local and lowest tier of public transit in the area, and connects to higher-order transit in the form of Simcoe County LINX, the county's regional inter-community bus service, as well as GO Transit train and bus service at the Bradford GO Station.
Annual boarding's in the first year of service was 19,009. For the second year (2015–16), this had only slightly increased, to 19,291. By the third year of service (2016–17), however, boarding's had jumped sharply to 24,409, and increased significantly again to 27,888 in 2017–18.
The town of Bradford West Gwillimbury received $76,387 in funding in 2017 from the federal Public Transit Infrastructure Funding program, which supported the purchase of a new bus.
In late 2017, transit planners conducted a public consultation process regarding the expansion of service. The most requested service improvements were (in order from most to least): the introduction of Saturday service, introduction of weekday evening service, introduction of Sunday service, a new connection to Newmarket, a third local bus route, and a connection to Barrie. A shuttle was also proposed to service the Reagens industrial area.
Following this process, planners recommended introduction of Saturday daytime (9am to 5pm) and weekday evening (5pm to 7pm) service, a pilot Newmarket connection, and the Reagens industrial shuttle. On 4 September 2018, Bradford West Gwillimbury Town Council voted for a transit funding increase of $192,200 to pay for these improvements, but rejected the $40,000 Newmarket pilot, which would have connected the Bradford GO Station with the Newmarket Bus Terminal, allowing BWG Transit riders to connect to YRT and Viva buses and enhancing east–west mobility within the region. Town councilors criticized the potential for the plan to encourage out-of-town shopping, such as at the Upper Canada Mall. As an alternative, Mayor Rob Keffer suggested that a cross-jurisdiction route would be best achieved through the upper-tier governments of Simcoe County and York Region and their respective transit services, rather than the town's local BWG Transit.
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