Inaugural LRT commute 'very good on all fronts,' transit boss says - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 12:45 AM | Calgary | -11.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Ottawa

Inaugural LRT commute 'very good on all fronts,' transit boss says

Transit officials say they were pleased by the smooth transition commuters made to light rail on Monday morning, a day OC Transpo has been planningfor years.

Bus riders have until Oct. 6 to get on board switch to Confederation Line

Transportation general manager John Manconi addresses reporters on Sept. 16, 2019, at Blair station after the first weekday commute on light rail. He's flanked by transit commission chair Allan Hubley, left, and vice-chair Jean Cloutier, right, both Ottawa city councillors. (Jean Delisle/CBC)

Ottawa transit officials say they were pleased by the smooth transition commuters made to light rail on Monday morning, a day OC Transpo has been planningfor years.

"This morning's commute was was very, very good on all fronts," transportation general managerJohn Manconi told reporters at a noon-hour briefing.

Manconi and councillors offered no firm numbers for how many people jumped on the train instead of staying on the bus system, which will keep operating as it traditionally has until a major changeover on Oct. 6.

"The trains were full. People weren't as smiling as much as they were on the weekend but that's because they're going to work on Monday morning," said Coun. Allan Hubley, transit commission chair.

"I suspect there's some water cooler discussions of peoplecomparing their commute times bus to rail. There might be some people opting to use the rail inbound for tomorrow morning," Manconi added.

Ottawa residents commute for the first time with the LRT

5 years ago
Duration 0:51
Commuters told CBC News what the experience was like on the city's first-ever workday with the LRT up and running.

Escalators at Rideau

The system is experiencing minor issues, such as escalators at Rideau station thatstopped working intermittently over the weekend

They did not break down, Manconi underscored.

"This is all normal. Those elevators and escalators go through a fine-tuning period," he said. "There's heavy loads so [the technicians]adjust the belts and so forth.

Manconi said a technician has been stationed at Rideau full time to keep tabs onits eight elevators and 18 escalators.

The59 elevators and 43 escalators along the full length of the new Confederation Line are monitored in real time so interruptions are spotted right away, he added.

A man descends the escalator at Ottawa's Parliament station on Sept. 14, 2019. (Andrew Lee/CBC)

Before the Confederation Line opened Monday morning, a woman scaled a fence into Tunney's Pasture station and entered areas where she was not permitted. The trespasserwas behavingerratically and was later taken to hospital with minor injuries, Manconi said.

A team is investigating what happened, and will look at video footage to figure out how to "closeany breaches."

Bus driver layoffs to come

The next test will come Oct. 6, when the duplicate bus service ends and the train line truly becomes the backbone upon which the entire transit system depends.

Riders will have to adjust tomore than 100 routechanges. Fewer than 200OC Transpodrivers will be laid off, anumber that has been steadily dropping over the years.

"We do not have to lay off as many people as we originally thought," said Manconi, thanking the transit unions for working with management to deal with vacant positions.

Some 180OC Transpo buses will also be taken off the road afterthe transition.