Council mulling compensation for riders when LRT reboots - Action News
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Ottawa

Council mulling compensation for riders when LRT reboots

The head of Ottawa's transit commission says city councillors are looking at the idea of providing some kind of compensation to riders inconvenienced by the latest shutdown of the LRT.

Chair of transit commission says he's broached the idea with the mayor's office

OC Transpo downtown Ottawa July 31, 2023, 13th day of bearing shutdown
Transit riders board an OC Transpo bus in downtown Ottawa on July 31, 2023, during the continued shutdown. (Guy Quenneville/CBC)

The head of Ottawa's transit commission says city councillors are looking at the idea of providing some kind of compensation to riders inconvenienced by the two-weeks-and-counting shutdown of the LRT.

But doing so might entail some financial rejigging, he says.

"It's something we are working on, that we're exploring," Coun. Glen Gower, who chairs the group of councillors who provide guidance and direction to the city's transit services department, told Radio-Canada on Saturday.

"It's complicated because we rely on fares for a large portion of the transit service," Gower continued. "We need to make sure if there is any kind of compensation, that there's a source [of money to make up for it]."

OC Transpo is already in a deficit andfaresgenerate between $7 million and $8 million in revenue a month, Gower added.

The city has offered free ridesin the past, Gower noted to CBCRadio's Ottawa Morning including for one month in 2021 after a derailment earlier that year kept the system offline for almost two months.

A decision of city council

The Confederation Line, the only completed segment of OC Transpo's LRT network, was shut down again out of an abundance of caution on July 17 when a problem was detected with a bearing on a single light-rail vehicle.

The city was hopeful to resume service on Monday, albeit with only a portion of its normal number of train cars, but that didn't pan out because of work needed to ensure wheels on the trains do not contact restraining rails.

A man in black glasses and a blazer with dark hair stands in front of a round table
Coun. Glen Gower chairs the committee that provides oversight of the city's transit service. (Jean Delisle/CBC )

In a previous LRT update on July 24,ReneAmilcar,the city's director of transit services, was asked if the city plans to compensate riders.

"We can probably talk about [compensation] later but for now I have todeliver a good service to the residents," she said.

Gower said he's spoken with the office of Mayor Mark Sutcliffe andother city councillors about the idea, as offering compensation would ultimately bea decision of council.

"OC Transpo management does not have the authority to change fares without council approval," Gower said. "Transit commission can discuss and make recommendations to council.However, since it is a budget-related question, it would be city council that would have to approve any changes."

Express service lauded by riders

To make up for the lack of LRT, OC Transpo has offered R1 replacement buses, as well as a complementof express buses taking people downtown.

The latter service launched Monday and was met with approval fromsome riders who spoke to CBC News that morning.

WATCH| Riders weigh in on free transit

Should transit be free amid LRT shutdown? Riders weigh in

1 year ago
Duration 0:55
Entering the third week without train service, transit users share their thoughts on whether or not OC Transpo customers should be compensated for Ottawa's latest LRT shutdown.

One rider, Lynn (who declined to give her last name), said taking an R1 bus meant about two and a half hours of commuting to and from work and "a time loss with my family," whereas an express bus vaulted her from Blair to downtown in about eight minutes on Monday, she said

As for OC Transpo's financial predicament, "Itotally get it, but it still doesn't matter," she said.

"If you want to restore some type of faith with customers, it's not our problem that you're in a deficit, that you created this mess with the LRT. We're all paying for it in one way or another, and I think they just got to bite the bullet and just give us something."

With files from Radio-Canada, Ottawa Morning and Arthur White-Crummey