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Montreal

Adapted transportation service in Quebec City in chaos following cyber-attack

A cyber-attack has frozen the server for Quebec City's adapted transportation service, forcing hundreds of users to stay home while data is manually restored.

Users 'held hostage' after personal data was hijacked for ransom

Sbastien Thriault (right) missed several outings this week, including a Christmas party with his curling club, because the adapted transportation service he uses was the victim of a cyber-attack. (Guylaine Bussires/Radio-Canada)

People who depend onQuebec City's adapted transportation service (STAC) to get around will have to wait untilnext week before the service is fully restored.

A cyber-attack on Monday morning froze the organization's online server, making it impossible to dispatch vehicles to STAC's10,000 users.

Patrick Fougeyrollas, who uses a wheelchair, missed two days of work. While he was able to reserve a ride by phone for Wednesday,Fougeyrollassaid it's unfortunate that others "are being held hostage".

"We need adapted transportation as compensation for our disability, and it's crucial for social participation, not just for work," he said.

Since priority is given to people who need a ride to their workplace, for school or for medical appointments, users like Sbastien Thriaulthave missed out on social outings.

"I missed my curling club's Christmas party, it's really not fun," said the 32-year-old who lives in the Beauport neighbourhood.

"It's like getting your legs cut off, because you can't go anywhere," said Thriault, whouses STACseveral times a week.

Call centre open to meet demand

TheRseaude Transport de laCapitale(RTC), thatsupervizesoperations forSTAC, has added personnel and extended its call centre's hoursto process requests that would normally be handled online.

But service for people whosufferfromcognitive deficiencies, which make up around 50 per cent of the clientele, had to be cancelled altogether.

The RTC'sgeneral manager AlainMerciersaidbecause they have special needs,it was impossible to safely "bring people from point A to point B," without having access to their personalinformation.

"When people entrust their children to us, or young adults who are not independent we have to take special precautions,"MerciertoldQuebec AMhost Susan Campbell.

Quebec City's adapted transportation service (STAC) will not be able to fully provide service to its 10,000 users until at least Monday, following a cyber-attack on its main data server. (Radio-Canada)

For the other half of its clientele, STACwas able meetaround60 percentof demand on Tuesday. Mercier said he hopedto see that climb to 80 per cent by the end ofWednesday.

Full service should be restored by Monday, as specialists manually re-enter the lost data.

No Plan B

This has Fougeyrollasquestioningwhy there was no back-up plan to recover the information and prevent the system from shutting down altogether.

Mercier said they've "learned their lesson,"and will migrate STAC'stechnical data into the RTC's central server,"to prevent these kinds of attacks in the future."

David Morin, who works with the Carrefour familial des personnes handicapes, has been fielding phone calls since Monday from people looking for information. (Radio-Canada)

The cyber-attack was an automated program that was able to "find a weak spot" in their system, said Mercier.

Meanwhile, David Morinhas been fielding dozens of calls from people trying to understand what is happening.

He works for the Carrefour familial des personnes handicapes, an advocacy group for people with disabilities in downtown Quebec City.

He is satisfied with the quick response from the RTCto restore the essential service.

"No one is responsible for this except those who sent this virus," Morin said.

"People are doing what they can, and they are having to deal with this crisis just like we are."

With files from Quebec AM and Radio-Canada's Guylaine Bussires