Search results
Results from the Go Local Guru Content Network
The app is still in Beta testing, but will eventually succeed the MYmta app. The new app has schedules and service alerts for subways, buses, Long Island Rail Road and Metro-North Railroad all in ...
MYmta is a mobile application -based passenger information display system developed by the Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) of New York City. A beta version of the app was launched on July 2, 2018, and as of June 2019 is still undergoing beta testing. While other applications exist which serve similar functions, MYmta is an all-in ...
MYmta, currently in a beta test phase, is available for download on Google Play and the Apple App Store. Find out what's happening in New York City with free, real-time updates from Patch. Subscribe
A beta version of MYmta was released to the general public in July of that year. [119] [120] In future versions of the MYmta app, the MTA planned to integrate the eTix functionality, as well as make it easier for Access-A-Ride customers to view when their vehicle will arrive at a certain point. [121]
The New York City Transit Authority (also known as NYCTA, the TA, [2] or simply Transit, [3] and branded as MTA New York City Transit) is a public-benefit corporation in the U.S. state of New York that operates public transportation in New York City. Part of the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, the busiest and largest transit system in ...
The updated MYmta app will give riders a chance to know how crowded buses are amid coronavirus, officials said. Matt Troutman , Patch Staff Posted Tue, Jul 21, 2020 at 4:07 pm ET
Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority Compact; Long title: An Act to grant the consent of Congress for the States of Virginia and Maryland and the District of Columbia to amend the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Regulation Compact to establish an organization empowered to provide transit facilities in the National Capital Region and for other purposes and to enact said amendment ...
After establishing Culpeper County, Virginia in 1748, the Virginia House of Burgesses voted to establish the Town of Fairfax on February 22, 1759. The name honored Thomas Fairfax, 6th Lord Fairfax of Cameron (1693–1781) [9] who was proprietor of the Northern Neck peninsula, a vast domain north of the Rappahannock River; his territory was then defined as stretching from Chesapeake Bay to what ...