Home | WebMail | Register or Login

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

Sign Up

Sign Up

Please fill this form to create an account.

Already have an account? Login here.

Thunder Bay

Bombardier to lay off 60 employees in Thunder Bay

Officials with Bombardier confirmed Friday that 60 workers at its Thunder Bay plant will lose their jobs.

Thunder Bay plant to focus on building TTC streetcars

Currently, 17 of the 204 TTC streetcars have been delivered. Bombardier says it will deliver 31 by the end of this year, followed by 40 cars in 2017. (Susan Goodspeed/CBC)
There is a lot of pressure on Thunder Bay's Bombardier plant to build street cars. But some changes mean layoffs for local staff.
Officials with Bombardier confirmed Friday that 60 workers at its Thunder Bay plant will lose their jobs.

The company said it will move production of light rail cars for Metrolinx in the Toronto area to a plant in Kingston, Ont. That move will free up space in the Thunder Bay plant to produce more streetcars for the Toronto Transit Commission.

'What we're doing now is taking bold and decisive actions to make sure that we hastendelivery of the TTC streetcars, which is essential to make sure we have solidarity with our customers, solidarity between our Ontario workers, and throughout our entire workforce," said Marc-Andre Lefebvre, a spokesperson for Bombardier.
Bombardier spokesperson Marc Andre Lefebvre says approximately 60 employees will be let go from the Thunder Bay plant, as production of rail cars moves to Kingston, ON. The move will allow the Thunder Bay facility to focus on producing streetcars for the TTC. (Submitted by Bombardier Transportation)

Lefebvre said the company needs to make this move, to ensure it can meet its production deadline of 204 streetcars by the end of 2019. Currently,17 streetcars have been delivered to the TTC.

Another Bombardier plant, in LaPocatiere, Quebec will take over the manufacturing of certain parts, such as frames for the streetcars, and will ship those parts to Thunder Bay.

"Once they build them, transfer those parts to Thunder Bay, and to an eventual second line for manufacturing and assembly that will be put in place for the TTC streetcars."

Lefebvre said the Thunder Bay plant has a number of orders, and will continue to be busy for the coming years.

He said the Thunder Bay operation will continue to focus on manufacturing GO Transit bi-level cars, as well as TTC streetcars and TTC Rocket subway cars.