Grays Harbor Transit

The Grays Harbor Transportation Authority, doing business as Grays Harbor Transit (and abbreviated as GH Transit),[1] is a public transit agency serving Grays Harbor County in the U.S. state of Washington. It operates ten fixed bus routes traveling through the county's major cities and connecting to Olympia in Thurston County and Centralia in Lewis County, as well as paratransit service, dial-a-ride routes and a vanpool fleet.[2] The agency, one of the first county transit authorities to be established in Washington state, began operations on June 16, 1975, and is one of few in the state that are not governed as a public transportation benefit area.[3]

Grays Harbor Transit
Grays Harbor Transit bus at Olympia Transit Center
Commenced operationJune 16, 1975 (1975-06-16)
HeadquartersHoquiam, Washington
LocaleGrays Harbor County, Washington
Routes10
Websiteghtransit.com

Routes

As of May 2, 2016, Grays Harbor Transit operates 10 fixed routes and 4 dial-a-ride routes. Fixed route buses run seven days a week; with the exception of route 57 (Tues/Thurs only); route 90 (Mon/Fri only); and route 60 (no Sunday service). Dial-a-ride routes operate only on weekdays, and service is suspended on national holidays.[4][5]

  • Route 10N: Fern Hill, Bench Drive, Walmart
  • Route 10S: South Aberdeen, Grays Harbor College, South Shore Mall
  • Route 30: Cosmopolis
  • Route 20: Aberdeen, Hoquiam, N&W Hoquiam, Community Hospital, Woodlawn
  • Route 40: Hoquiam, Aberdeen, Hoquiam, Central Park, Montesano, Satsop, Elma, McCleary, Olympia
  • Route 41: Montesano Dial-a-Ride and Central Park
  • Route 42: Elma Dial-a-Ride
  • Route 60: Ocean Shores, Ocean City, Copalis Beach, Copalis Crossing, Pacific Beach, Moclips, Taholah
  • Route 51: Ocean Shores Dial-a-Ride
  • Route 70: Westport-Grayland
  • Route 56: Westport Route Deviation and Dial-a-Ride
  • Route 57: Raymond/Tokeland
  • Route 50: Quinault, Amanda Park, Neilton, Humptulips
  • Route 90: Oakville, Centralia

References

External links