On a typical weekday
morning, people waiting at Lawrence East RT Station on the southbound platform
to go one stop to Kennedy Stn. will often stand there while one, two, three, four…trains enter the station full
(or, semi-full, more on that later) and leave without those people being able
to get on. At 8am, those people are not out gang-banging or slinking in the
shadows targeting little old ladies; at that time of the morning, people are
out using public transit because they must, to get on with a productive day
either working for a living or going to school to better themselves and prepare
for being able to contribute to society.
This is cruel and unusual torment and torture for people just trying to get on with their day.
A few days ago, I arrived at
Lawrence East RT Stn. and watched three trains roll through. In times past, I
have actually spoken out to people on the train conglomerating in the doorways
to “move into the train so other people can get where they’re going too” and
people respond, more often than not.
Down at Yonge and Bloor,
there are “conductors” (for lack of knowledge of whatever the official title
is, no disrespect to them) to direct riders to move southward on the southbound
platform so that the northernmost cars are not slowed by the most traffic in
the ingress/egress process.
If TTC is going to argue
that it’s up to riders to move into trains so there’s more room, I’m going to
argue “fine, then get rid of the conductors at Yonge/Bloor and let people do
what they’re supposed to do on their own.” Of course the TTC would only respond
“Yeah, but people are not doing what they’re supposed to do, so we’ve got to
conduct them accordingly.” To which I would reply “Fine, exactly. As is the
case at Yonge and Bloor, so is the case at Lawrence RT Stn., so put some
conductors on the RT.”
Those few days ago, after
the third train pulled out with having boarded any additional riders at
Lawrence East, I went over to the northbound platform and took a train up to
Ellesmere in order to attempt to get on the southbound one stop sooner. No
dice. Another train came in full. So I went further east to Midland. Nope.
Full. So I went east to the end, to McCowan, to start the westbound trek from
the beginning of the line.
from TTC.ca |
So, I called TTC, on my
mobile phone, and got information. I explained the ridiculous situation, and he
said “well, it IS ‘rush hour’ but this is a customer service issue, I’ll
transfer you.”
First of all, his statement
“it’ IS rush hour” implies that I should expect delays. I tell you what – as
far as I’m concerned, a transit service should be professional and a subject
matter expert in the field of public transit and they should know that rush hour requires more service. Telling
me “it IS rush hour” should have been interpreted as “dear customer, I’m very
sorry we have inconvenienced you and not provided the sufficient level of
service for the time of the day. I’ll make an official suggestion for the
schedulers to address this, whether adding more trains or using longer trains
or buying double-deck trains like the GO system uses or even just getting
conductors to help out and move people into the the cars so the full capacity
of the trains we have can be more productive. Thanks for calling TTC.”
I waited on hold. And waited. And waited. On a cell phone. Then I hung up, so I'm writing this post and contacting TTC by their website.
After submitting my complaint, I got this reference number 80866. |
This disgusting situation of
having to go backward and waste almost an hour trying to travel, what, 2km? is
not some acute situation that happened that day. I will edit this post when I
am able to shoot a video of the entire scenario, which I can guarantee is
repeated daily. Watch TorontoMyWay’s Youtube channel for updates.
And that’s the other gripe.
Even if they respond and add vehicles and the service improves, it took complaints rather than a systematic initiative from the TTC, who should be monitoring ridership to know when routes need more attention.
I’ve spoken to TTC vehicle operators who say “we can’t advise TTC that we need
more vehicles on the route. It’s up to passengers to call TTC and complain.”
The odd relationship between
the union and the TTC is utterly inefficient and unacceptable. To Joe and Jane
Commutta, a person operating a TTC vehicle is often the only “representative of
TTC” within miles and, for all intents and purposes, the operator IS the TTC.
Yet, TTC utilizes operators as “eyes on the street” painfully minimally, and
often there’s no other way for a commuter to know what’s going on in any given
situation.
I’ve previously suggested
that TTC adopt the honour fare collection system, allowing operators to be less
the targets of fare dispute violence and become more at east in communicating
with riders in a helpful manner. At the same time, fare checkers with flak
jackets/bulletproof vests and on foot without having to worry about operating
the vehicle can give more attention to being of service to riders beyond just
random checks for proof of payment and issuing fines for people thinking they
can get lucky today.
Anyway, the notion of going
backwards on the system should be a professional embarrassment to anyone
associated with the management of the TTC who has any pride in their vocation.
For a city the size and
national importance of Toronto, our standard acceptance of mediocrity needs to
be killed an agonizing death to be true to the title of “world-class cities” –
the real examples of which showcase getting big ideas done, not making excuses
and accepting mediocrity.
Maybe the problem with TTC
is the lack of diversity in management. Most people do not know that the first taxi service in Toronto was started by a Black man back in 1837, an ex-slave who took the
Underground Railroad from Kentucky to freedom in Toronto. Thornton Blackburn
became a member of high society at a time when Black folks actually had more
representation in leadership than they do today. His taxi service corporate
colours were actually adopted by the TTC – yes, the red and yellow of the TTC
is a tribute to an ex-slave who had a vision that he could not just contribute
but lead in a field. Toronto has a rich history of Black leadership that is
under-taught, under-honoured, and we are, today, far less representative at
leadership levels of the diversity on the street than we were 100 years ago.
Like my commute a few days
ago, we’re not going forward, not getting ahead, we’re regressing, we’re going
backwards. For shame.
Perhaps, in a true respect
for what this city was, is, and could be, the TTC should revisit its hiring
practices and start to tap into more talent – clearly, what they have is just
not good enough.
And, please, I don’t mean
“diversity” as in hire a token visible minority for public-facing roles that
appease the optics and can be the face of TTC when things go wrong and public
angst is looking for a model for the effigy to burn in the town square. I mean
stakeholder, decision-making, vision-writing, day-to-day executive managing
diversity.
One of the results I’d
quickly expect is more respect for all TTC riders across the entire 416 – not
just those who ride the Yonge line through the “beautiful neighbourhoods,” but
especially those in areas that need transit most.
2 comments:
The diversity argument is a good one (though I don't think race has anything to do with it...). More analysis of the diversity of routes, transfers and ridership is certainly key to improving service. Rather than standing around with a clipboard and maroon jacket, the TTC managers need to ride along in the buses and interact with the public.
As for the overcrowding on the SRT, my guess is that this comes down to the sheepish attitude Torontonians have towards their fellow citizens. Everyone's afraid to open their mouths. For whatever reason, we need a person of authority to tell us what to do, which comes back to the TTC conductors and managers. One thing I loved about the LIRR in New York was that their conductors didn't give a f*#@ - they call out anyone on the train without a second thought.
Hopefully it'll get better with the new LRT line. In the meantime, I think the SRT needs to go cattle-car style and rip out all the seats.
Hey "Anonymous at 6:24pm",
Thanks for the thought. Please visit often, I appreciate constructive, thoughtful dialogue.
There's a funny video on Youtube of how conductors in Japan go Flintstones style and two and three of them literally have to push and jam people in, in order to close the door, like packing a suitcase beyond its capacity and then sitting on it to get it closed! Perhaps we're heading in that direction...?
I've thought about longer cars, more frequency, double-decker...but ripping out the seats and going standing-room only would probably be the quickest and cheapest way to increase capacity...
However, I've already argued that Scarborough is under-served nay neglected; turning the RT into a cattle-car would be a gross indignity.
If you're in Toronto, you've already been riding the new trains on the Yonge-University-Spadina line - any reason why the new trains haven't graced the Bloor-Danforth yet?
And, yes, TTC managers riding along in buses and interacting with the public would be incredible. As I said, unfortunately, all-too-often the only "representatives" are unionized operators who have their own priority and have been positioned (exposed? left to twist?) to function at arms-length from TTC proper. TTC-union relations are a whole other conversation that needs to be had; it is, for example, why buying fare is so limited, in order to ensure fare collectors' jobs are protected by ensuring they must remain involved in the fare-selling transaction (why aren't there machines to dispense tokens outside the turnstyles at every station in the system?)
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