The business plan Ottawa's commuter buses use is to fund the far-flung routes with very high fares (often charging rates like $10-$15 one way and $250-$300 per month), appealing to downtown commuters who would have to pay about that for downtown parking anyway. Most are funded entirely through private money, except for the municipally owned and subsidized systems in Russell and Clarence-Rockland (the latter actually has very good service--a bus every 15 minutes or so for the entire 3 hours of each peak period).
Given that Calgary has an even higher concentration of downtown employment, and even higher downtown parking rates, than Ottawa, combined with cheaper gas that should make the operating cost of commuter buses lower, I'd imagine copying the Ottawa model would work even better in Calgary.
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Originally Posted by Allan83
Airdrie also has about 50,000, but Crossfield has only about 3000. It surprises me a little that it would go that far north, but there are other communities around there that might add up to enough.
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The largest community served by Ottawa's commuter bus network is Rockland, with a population of about 15,000 people or so.