6 months in, Ottawa's LRT has had more bad days than good ones
CBC Ottawa has crunched the numbers on the Confederation Line's bumpy start
Sixmonths after its flashy opening, the Confederation Line has had its schedule thrown off more days than it's run smoothly, and hasn't been able to string together more than five consecutive days of problem-free public transit since the transition from expressbuses ended.
OC Transpo customers funnelled aboardthe electric Alstom trains that now serve asthe only express route through downtown Ottawahave had a pretty miserable time of it, prompting calls for external reviews, fare relief and heads to roll.
Earlier this week, Ottawa city council voted to take the first step in the complex process of trying to get out of its contract with the line's builder and maintenance group.
All this while construction on a $4.66-billion LRT extension is underway.
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As of the end of Thursday's afternoon peak, the Confederation Line has experienced problems causing delays, platform closures or requiring backup buses on 98 of the 180 days it's been open, or 54 per cent of the time.
By our count, the Confederation Line has had 114 separate problems, while the Trillium Line has experienced eight over the same period.Some last a matter of minutes, while others shut down a significant portionof the line for hours.
From Jan. 16 to 31,problems on the Confederation Lineoccurred daily,the longest streak of bad luck.
The city keeps careful track ofhow often it sticks to its "scheduled service delivery," but told CBC we'd have to wait for a March 18 transit commission meeting for the most recent statistics, including ridership numbers.
November was bleakest month
Since Oct. 6 the Confederation Line has enjoyed a single five-day run of uninterrupted service early in the new year when many people were still on vacation.
In terms of days without a glitch, December was the best month, while November was the worst.
The most common issue tweeted by OC Transpo has been the catch-all "stopped" or "immobilized" train, followed by door and power problems.
Stations at the east end of the LRT have had more problems than those to the west.
Blair station has seen the most issues with a train or piece of equipment, with 14.
St-Laurent and uOttawa have each had nine, while Hurdman has had eight.
Pimisi station at LeBreton Flats has the best recordwith three.
Judging byOC Transpo's Twitter alerts, there have beenmore than 430 hours of schedule disruptions over the past six months.
Considering theLRT runs 20 hours on most workdays Friday gets an extra hour at night that's more than 21 fulldays worth of problems.
The measure of success
There's one view thatthe line has never run on schedule, because we'venever had the 15 trains that we were promisedoperating at once.
Until late January, there were 13 trains on the line most days. Then the number dropped consistently and dramatically,with as few as seven trains on the track at some points.
There are also different ways to define an LRT issue. We know from our reportersand other ridersthat trains sometimes sit idleor platforms close without OC Transpo tweeting a service alert.
OC Transpo officials said in a response to an inquiry from a transit commissioner in November that there were 25 "events" on the Confederation Line but OC Transpo had tweeted about 30 disruptions.
To compile ourstatistics, we've relied onthese @OC_Transpo service alertsbecause they're direct from the source, and often include time, cause and location.
With files from Leah Hansen