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Ottawa

LRT shut down again after 2nd train derailment since August

No injuries were reported in Sunday afternoon's derailment, the second on the Confederation LRT Line since the beginning of August. It could be at least a week before service on the line resumes.

No injuries reported, TSB notified of 'bizarre' Sunday incident

A red-and-white train is parked on train tracks on a sunny day while yellow tape with the word
Caution tape is strung up next to the site of an LRT train derailment on Ottawa's Confederation Line on Sept. 19, 2021. No one was injured when the train left the tracks. (Nicholas Cleroux/Radio-Canada)

It could be at least a week before service resumes on Ottawa's Confederation LRT line, officials say, after a train derailed Sunday afternoon the second derailment since the beginning of August.

Sources have confirmed 13 people were on board the train when it went off the tracks just before 12:30 p.m. Sunday west of Tremblay station.

No one was injured in the incident, said John Manconi, general manager of the city's transportation services department.

Two axles on the train's second car came dislodged from the rail, Manconi said in a Sunday evening statement. The train had recently undergone repairs to one of its axles, but Manconi said it wasn't yet clear whether that axle had anything to do with the derailment.

The Transportation Safety Board of Canada is already on site and, along with City of Ottawa teams, hasbegun investigating "where the derailment started, the extent of the damage, and the root cause," Manconiwrote.

None of the wheels came loose from the axle, he added.

Police were still on scene early Sunday eveningreviewing whether "outside factors" contributed to the derailment, Manconi said.

Replacement buses running

The derailment caused significant damage to the train, the track and a switch box, said Rideau Transit Maintenance CEO Mario Guerra at a press briefing late Sunday afternoon.

Based on the extent of the damage, the Confederation Line will likely remain out of service for at least a week, he said.

OC Transpo says R1 replacement buses are running tohelp transport people, and transit riders should expect longer travel times when planning their routes.

Those buses wouldbe in place to help people get to polling stations on Monday for the federal election, Guerra said.

Ina press release, Ottawa Fire Servicessaid the train derailed near Riverside Drive. When crews arrived, they determined the incident to be minor.

"Prior to arrival, OC Transpo had de-energized the train and stopped train traffic in both directions. Ottawa fire crews assisted with the evacuation of persons who were on board," the release said.

Crews also made sure the train "would not need to be stabilized prior to an investigation being conducted," the fire department said.

Incident 'bizarre,' says rider

Steph Chevalier-Crockettwas returning home from a visit with a friendwhen she boarded the train at Tremblay.

Theshort, slow ride was bumpy, Chevalier-Crockett said, before the train came to a complete stop. For what seemed about 15 minutes, there was no indication of what happened, she said.

"Everyone just sat there looking at each other," said Chevalier-Crockett, who works for a city councillor.

Over the next half hour, passengers heard announcements thatofficialswere getting help because the train was out of service. Even when she saw special constables, firefighters and paramedics pull up, Chevalier-Crockett said she wasn't overly worriedas she "thought it was normal."

An OC Transpo specialconstable boarded and eventually helped passengers off the train, Chevalier-Crockett said.They disembarked on the south side and then walked on thegravel path in between the two sets of rails, back to Tremblay station.

It doesn't inspire confidence, to say the least.- Steph Chevalier-Crockett

Anolder couple with mobility issues needed some help, said Chevalier-Crockett.

"I figured it was safe, but it was bizarre."

Chevalier-Crockettwas riding on the"front" car LRT trains are comprised of two separate light-rail vehicles that are linked together and the derailment occurred on the "back" car, the one closer to Tremblay station.

"So when we were walking past the back car, that's when I saw the derailment," she said. "It was quite a bit off thetracks and leading to the other side. It was much worse than I thought."

The passengers were then led across the tracks and down a grassy bank toward the pathway on the north side of the rails, and told a bus would come to take them to Hurdman station.Chevalier-Crockett got permission from officials to go back to Tremblay station to catch a cab.

"It doesn't feel great. It doesn't inspire confidence, to say the least," she said.

Police officers speak with an OC Transpo official Sunday afternoon, not long after the train left the tracks. Train service may not resume on the Confederation Line for several days. (Nicholas Cleroux/Radio-Canada)

'Not a safe system'

As of late Sunday night, the derailed train was being secured so thatTSB teams could return to the site Monday, Manconi said.

All other trains on the line would be inspected and then driven back to the city's Belfast Yard maintenance facility, he said.

Sunday's derailment comes six weeksafter a train derailedAug. 8 at Tunney's Pasture station when an axle broke and a wheel snapped off.

Thatevent also shut down the Confederation Line for almost a week.

Following an investigation, it turned out a total of 10light railvehicles in OC Transpo's fleet of 39 needed repair due to axlebearing issues.

"What we have here is not just an inferior system, but I'm afraid that it is not a safe system," said Coun. Catherine McKenney, who sits on the city's transit commission.

"The people in this city who ride transit, who take the train every day, the people in this city who paid for this system deserve answers. And we have to start to also demand that alongside them."

In a tweet, Mayor Jim Watson said city staff were gathering information about the latest derailment and that transit commission would be briefed Monday morning.

"I'm sure it's frustrating for the city and OCTranspo," said Steven Grant, who was cycling near Tremblay station Sunday when he noticed gravel from beneath the rails had sprayed all over the bike path.

Soon after, he came across the derailed LRT train.

"[It's] certainly frustrating for the taxpayers as wellwhen we see strings of these incidents," he said.

With files from Ben Andrews

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