Birmingham Jefferson County Transit Authority

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The Birmingham Jefferson County Transit Authority, also called MAX or BJCTA is the public transit authority of the Birmingham District. The authority provides bus service throughout Jefferson County including the municipalities of Birmingham, Bessemer, Brighton, Fairfield, Homewood, Hoover, Lipscomb, Midfield, Mountain Brook, Tarrant and Vestavia Hills. Currently, the authority operates 109 buses and has 37 routes to serve the counties citizens. Its headquarters is located in the Birmingham Central Station in downtown Birmingham.

History

The BJCTA has its origins in Birmingham's earliest mass transit operator, the Birmingham Street Railway Company established in 1884. By 1890 multiple private transport carriers had emerged in the rapidly expanding city resulting in the consolidation as the Birmingham Railway & Electric Company. They would operate Birmingham's first electric streetcar in 1891 and put into operation Birmingham's first motor buses in 1921. In 1948 transit ridership reached an all time peak at 93 million passengers.

In 1951 the company would change its name to the Birmingham Transit Company and during this period dismantle the remnants of the once expansive streetcar network. By 1973, enabling legislation at the state level resulted in the establishment of the Birmingham Jefferson County Transit Authority that is still in use today.

References

  • "Chronology of Birmingham's Public Transit System". (September 27, 2006) [1].

External link