'Who knows?' LRT riders tune out timelines as shutdown drags on - Action News
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Ottawa

'Who knows?' LRT riders tune out timelines as shutdown drags on

As riders reflect on whether to pay for August passes, transit commission head says compensation remains a 'complicated' question.

After latest surprise, passengers find promises unreliable as the trains

A man at a bus stop
As Ottawa's light rail shutdown approaches two weeks, Ebubechukwu Chime says he's stopped paying attention to any updates about the fate of the Confederation Line. (Arthur White-Crummey/CBC News)

OC Transpo threw a new curveball at its riders on Friday, announcing that it needed at least 10 more days to resume LRT service but by then, Ebubechukwu Chime had already stopped paying attention.

"I didn't even know that, because the delays and interruptions happen so much," he said, after disembarking from a replacementbus from Tunney's Pasture Saturday.

"My confidence is really,really low," said Chime."It's like the interruptions are part of the service."

Ottawa's light railsystem hasbeen shut down since July 17. The trains' bearings are to blame,but the city has not explainedwhy they keep failing.

Rene Amilcar, the city's general manager of transit services, was still expressing confidence on Thursday that eight single-car trains a fraction of the overall fleet could return to the Confederation Line tomorrow.

But that fell apart Friday when sheannounced crews would have to make minuscule adjustments to the line's restraining rails. Those railsprevent derailments, but they could be rubbing against train wheels and fatiguing their bearings.

Amilcar said OC Transpohas now pinpointed the problemand is"so close" to a solution. But with so many dashed hopes, Chime isn't the only one tuning out her assurances.

"We were all geared up to go on Monday," said Michael Suddard, who was waiting for a replacement bus downtownSaturday with his daughter Dora.

Suddard said he's isn'tcounting on Amilcar's rough10-day timeline for service to resume. His personal estimate?

"Optimistically, probably Labour Day," he said, adding he doesn't believe OC Transpo has found the root cause of the nearly two-week shutdown.

"Now we're just finding out thatmaybethe problem is the restraining rail'soff by a few millimetres," he said."We didn't find out till now,and we had all these experts supposedly looking at it 10 different ways till Tuesday.And that was it, maybe?Who knows?"

Winning back riders a battle

Members of the advocacy group Ottawa Transit Riders are just as skeptical.

"We're looking now at other issues that we weren't initially expecting,"said Laura Shantz."We were told that [they just have to] check the bearings, verify them and then get going.Now we're told, 'Oh, maybe there's larger problems.' That signifies a pattern of problems that goes back to 2019."

In her view, OC Transpo's communication has improvedwith frequent updates and daily press conferences but that only goes so far when every message is bad news.

She said it will be an uphill battle to win back people who have already abandoned transit.

"There's only so much public patience," she said.

Pimisi station during July 2023 LRT shutdown Ottawa
Gates block off access to the Pimisi LRT station earlier this month. It's been nearly two weeks since trains have run in Ottawa. (Guy Quenneville/CBC)

John Redins, another Ottawa Transit Riders member, said Friday's announcement is especially hard on people with disabilities who can't easily squeeze onto packed R1 buses.

"I'm basically stuck with Para Transpo because of it," said Redins, adding he has to plan ahead 24 hours for any trip, even to buy a carton of milk.

"I just shake my head," he added."I think it's going to affect people's mental health."

He too finds the 10-day estimate unrealistic, and feels OCTranspo needs to take action to keep riders using transit amid the collapse in confidence.

"They have to do something, especially with the fares," he said. "Because August 1st is thisweek, and you think people will want to pay for a monthly bus pass for a system that's not working?"

A man sits behind a microphone at a public meeting.
Stittsville Coun. Glen Gower, the chair of Ottawa's transit commission, says questions about any sort of rider reimbursement are 'complicated' due to OC Transpo's hefty budget deficit. (Jean Delisle/CBC)

'A complicated question'

Suddardsaid he "reluctantly" paid for his pass this weekend. He wonders if he'll be compensated, should OC Transpo offer some sort of free service to win people back.

Questions about compensation are tough to answer, said Coun. Glen Gower, who chairs Ottawa's transit commission.

He noted that OC Transpo's budget is already about $39 million in the hole.

"We rely on fares for a large portion of the transit service. We budget about $8 million a month,so we need to make sure if there's any kind of compensationthat there's a source that that money can come from," he said.

"It's a complicated question, but definitely something we're looking at."