'It's a disaster': Jammed doors hold up LRT for 2nd straight morning
City pledges to look at door sensors to prevent another chaotic commute
For the second morning in a row, jammed doors on LRT trainscaused long delays and crowded platforms up and down the Confederation Line, with some fed up passengers finishing their journey on foot.
A train door became stuck at Lyon station at about 8 a.m. after a passenger running for the train tried to pry the doors open, causing delays that lasted until about 9:30 a.m. Shortly after the Lyon station incident, a rider at Parliament station caused a second jam by holding the train doors open with both hands.
Once again, the domino effect meant passengers who continued to pile off buses crammed platforms, escalators and concourses, especially at the line's end points.
It was practically a repeat ofTuesday morning's commute, only according to some passengers, worse.
Il semble que ce soit ce train qui est problmatique en direction Blair la station Lyon. Regardez la vido, les gens sont invits quitter le train. #iciottgat pic.twitter.com/Ym7iaeeyBU
—@JeremieB
Many riders optedto walk the 3.5 kilometres from Tunney's Pasture station to their offices downtown, including Rob Laflche.
"It's a disaster," Laflche said."There was no place to come out. There were hundreds and hundreds of people inside [the station],and you can't do anything."
Hundreds walking to work from Tunneys #lrt station after train service halted #ottnews pic.twitter.com/ZuPaHQ06gF
—@GiacomoPanico
OC Transporan R1 replacement buses between Tunney's Pasture and Rideau stations until about 9:20 a.m.
This was at 8:34 and its still packed as passengers wait for R1 bus service to shuttle them downtown from lrt Tunneys pic.twitter.com/2qpoO8V9e0
—@GiacomoPanico
Lane Bourbonniere andAustin Tarinwere among the throng of frustrated passengerswho elected to hail a cab or summon an Uberto finish their trip.
"It's a little frustrating because we wake up early to get to work assuming that OC Transpo is going to be reliable, and it's been showing that it's not," Bourbonniere said.
This is ridiculous.All I can do is laugh.- Austin Tarin, passenger
"It's comical at this point," Tarin added. "It's day three and this happens already a second time?This is ridiculous.All I can do is laugh."
Tarin also had a message for OC Transpo and the city's general manager of transportation services,John Manconi.
"You rushed it. Fixthe stuff or bring buses back at least until the next stage is complete. You can't be doing this in the first weeks."
Changes coming
At a newsconference Wednesday afternoon, Manconi announced a number of steps would be taken to address the door issues, including reassessing "dwell times" the length of time the doorsremain open for boarding at LRT stations.
Manconisaid the doors have safety sensors that lock the door in an "open state" once they try unsuccessfully to close three times or if a rider tries to hold them open. He said train manufacturer Alstom would check the entire fleet to make sure those were properly calibrated and not too sensitive.
He also said"well-intentionedtechnicians" were trying to repair the doors after they were stuck open.Inthe future, passengers would instead be told to leave the train andthe train would be taken out of servicebefore those repairs are undertaken, Manconi said.
There will also be more OC Transpoemployees reminding riders how to use the trains, as well as more station announcements about proper LRT behaviour, Manconi said.OC Transpo willalso be installing markings on the station platforms, he added,indicating where people should wait for the trains.
Not blaming customers: Manconi
"I want to be crystal clear: we are not blaming or criticizing our customers," Manconisaid. "We are all adapting to the Confederation Line system and our goal is to help everyone through the process."
By 9:15 a.m.Line 1 had resumed full service, but OC Transpo anticipated delays wouldcontinue for some time.
On Tuesday a passenger held a door open at uOttawa station and broke it, taking more than an hour for train travel to return to normal as the problem train was removed.
When asked about door issues on Friday, before the three week transition period with parallel bus service ended, the city said doors were working properly80,000 times a day and incidents happened "a very small percentage" of the time.
With files from Trevor Pritchard