Hour-long delay for stalled train prompts 5 Londoners to file official complaints - Action News
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London

Hour-long delay for stalled train prompts 5 Londoners to file official complaints

Transport Canada received five complaints about Canadian Pacific Railway after a July incident that saw a stalled train block downtown traffic for more than an hour.

Canadian Pacific Railway told CBC it 'regrets the inconvenience to the public'

A CP Rail train snarled traffic on Richmond Street in London, Ont. for over an hour on the morning of July 18, 2018. (Maram Hijazi/CBC)

Londoners are finally so fed up with stalled railway trains, they're willing to talk on the phone.

That's according to Transport Canada, who say they received five separate complaints about a July incidentthat saw a Canadian Pacific Railway train stalled downtown for more than an hour, and desperate pedestrians climbed between rail cars to cross the street.

Five complaints may not sound like much, but it's a sharp increase considering that Londoners have in the past proven more willing to tweet their frustration than pick up the phone to make a call.

In May, Transport Canada toldCBCNews ithadn't received a single complaint about stalled trains in the past six months despite plenty of social media grumbling about trains stopped for 10 minutes or more.

According to federal regulations, stopped trains can't block crossings for more than five minutes, and are required to move immediately if emergency vehicles need to pass.

In response to the July 18 incident, Transport Canada handed CPa letter of non-compliance and a Section 31 Notice under the Railway Safety Act. In an email statement, the railway regulatoradded that it's now reviewing CP'sresponse to the notice to "determine next steps."

For their part, CP told CBC News the blocked crossing resulted from an abnormal mechanical issue, and that they worked to resolve the issue "as expeditiously as possible."

"CP regrets the inconvenience to the public," a CP spokesperson said in an email.

Nothing but a 'slap on the wrist,'says Squire

Adelaide Street is often paralyzed as massive freight trains rumble in and out of the nearby Canadian Pacific railyards, paralyzing one of the city's major arteries, often several times a day. (Colin Butler/CBC News)

Despite the relative spike in calls, Ward 6 Coun. Phil Squire saidhe doesn't think anything will comeof the snafu, calling Transport Canada's notice to CP a "bureaucratic slap on the wrist."

"It's one bureaucracy saying to another 'shame on you,'and then things just carry on," said Squire, who's running for re-election in the fall.

"I don't see in CP or CN a desire for change."

Squire says London is past the point where it makes sense to physically move the tracks,and that the only workable solution is to build infrastructure around the crossings.

An underpass near the busy Adelaide St. crossing is already in the works. In August, city staff released a design that will routeAdelaide's four lanes of traffic beneath the tracks, and cost $58 million.

CP is expected to pay about 15 per cent of that cost, or just under $9 million.

"They're giving us a little bit of money towards that, but hardly anything at all," Squire said.

"It's on us to do the best we can, and that's doing the underpass."

Both London Police and Canadian Pacific have warned against climbing between cars, an act they point out is dangerous and illegal.

HOW TO COMPLAIN:

Contact Transport Canada's Ontario regional office at 416-973-9820 for any "questions or concerns about rail safety in Ontario."