Tight budget could leave transit riders exposed to the elements - Action News
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Ottawa

Tight budget could leave transit riders exposed to the elements

Temporary scaffolding that protectspublic transit riders from foul weather as they dashbetween the LRT and connecting buses at Hurdman and Tunney's Pasture stations is on the budget chopping block at Ottawa city hall this week.

Protective scaffolding at Hurdman, Tunney's Pasture stations costing $700K a year

Transit riders at Hurdman station use the scaffolding erected there after the LRT opening in 2019 for protection against the elements.
High overhead: The scaffolding at Hurdman station offers transit riders protection from the elements, but the city has identified it as a potential source of savings in this year's budget. (Maxim Saavedra-Ducharme/CBC)

Temporary scaffolding that protectspublic transit riders from foul weather as they dashbetween the LRT and connecting buses at Hurdman and Tunney's Pasture stations is on the budget chopping block at Ottawa city hall this week.

Soon after the Confederation Line was launched in September 2019, the city erected the covered scaffolding on the bus platforms at the two stations, where the paths leading from the station doors to the buses are particularly long and riders found they were exposed to the elements.

The city has spent nearly$2 million to rent the scaffoldingsince it was erected. The price tag for this year alone isexpected to be about $700,000.

Now, the temporary weather covering could come down as part of an effort to find $47 million in savings in this year's transit budget.

The possibility came as a surprise to a number of OC Transpo riders who say they often walk or stand under the protective scaffolding at Hurdman.

"Um, wow," said Phil Barbosawhen told of the plan."The scaffolding is actually pretty useful."

Barbosatakes the train from Tunney's Pasture to Hurdman, where he catches a connecting bus that he says can sometimes take 30or 40 minutesto arrive.

"If it's raining, it there's hail, it there's snow, it does provide shelter," he said of the scaffolding. "Walking from the station all the way down here can be quite a trek with the amount of people."

Phil Barbosa doesn't think the weather-protecting scaffolding should be removed without a replacement.
Phil Barbosa was surprised to hear the canopy at Hurdman station is slated for removal. He said he finds the structure 'pretty useful' when the weather's unpleasant. (Maxime Saavedra-Ducharme/CBC)

Harshit Tomar was similarly unimpressed.

"It's not a good idea," saidthe University of Ottawa student, who arrived from India only a few months ago.He works at Billings Bridge and saidboth buses he can take from Hurdman arrive at the far end of the bus platform.

"If this is gone and it's snowing, so how would you supposed to just walk over here?"

Amina Asadwas also unhappy to hear the scaffolding might be coming down.

"When it's raining outside, if it's snowing, people can just walk underneath it and get away from the weather," she told CBC. "I useit all the time, so I think people should keep it as a permanent thing."

'Very worrisome,' councillor says

The plan to tear down the scaffolding also came as a surprise to Alta Vista Coun. Marty Carr who,like many residents in her ward, uses the station regularly as a transfer point.

"I wasn't aware and it's very worrisome to me that that's being considered,"Carr told CBC following a marathon transit commission meeting earlier this month.

A politician smiles and gives a thumbs-up at a desk.
Alta Vista Coun. Marty Carr reacts after signing her oath of office at Ottawa City Hall on Nov. 15, 2022. (Spencer Colby/The Canadian Press)

Ironically, that meeting began with a discussion about improving the scaffolding, which some find unsightlydespite coloured tarps placed there by the city. In fact, the transit commission directed staff to report back on what a permanent covered pathway might look like, and what it might cost.

But Carr said she doesn't see how the current scaffolding can come down before a long-term solution is found.

"I think there'll be a lot of concern that the plan is actually to take the scaffolding away when residents have been asking for things to be made more permanent and to look better and be more reliable."

Tunney's temporary western terminus

At Tunney's Pasture, the city had to borrow federal land to expand the bus platform after the initial design proved too small to accommodate all the people who would betransferring between buses and the LRT. The larger platform means people havefarther to go to get from the station to their bus stop, so the city erected the scaffolding to provide protection from the elements.

Tunney's Pasture sees crowds during afternoon commute

5 years ago
Duration 0:49
People connecting to buses from the LRT said Tunney's Pasture was busy during the Monday afternoon commute, with one passenger saying the bus service was the "weak link."

Tunney's is currently the western terminusof the Confederation Line, and has to accommodate all the buses from that sideof the city. The Stage 2 western extension is currently slated to open in late 2026 it's 17 months late so far at which point the platform will be reduced and the scaffolding likely won't be needed any more.

Kitchissippi Coun. Jeff Leiper, whose ward includes Tunney's Pasture,said he'dlike to hear from riders about how important the scaffolding is to their commute.

OC Transpo wants to remove the scaffolding that provides weather protection at Tunney's Pasture station this year, even though the entire bus platform will be revamped in 2026.
OC Transpo wants to remove the scaffolding that provides weather protection at Tunney's Pasture station this year, even though the entire bus platform will be revamped in 2026. (Maxim Saavedra-Ducharme/CBC)

Tight budget calls for savings

The fact that the scaffolding is on the chopping block is a sign of what Mayor Mark Sutcliffe called a "tight" 2023 draft budget, which council is set to approve on Wednesday.

There are plenty of signs of penny pinching in the city's $5.5-billion budget, from slightly shrinking the heritage planning spending despite alooming deadline to designate potentially at-risk heritage properties to increasing councillors' traffic-calming budgets by 25 per cent instead of doubling them as the mayor promised in last fall's election campaign.

But nowhere are the budget constraints more apparent than in transit.

Council has directed OC Transpo to freeze fares,raise taxes by just 2.5 per cent and maintain service. To that end, OC Transpo plans to hire 52 net new drivers, who should be able to help reduce the number of bus cancellations, which can reach 400 on a bad day.

A red bus is stopped on a downtown street. An electronic sign on the front of the bus reads
OC Transpo had to find tens of millions in savings to be able to deliver a budget based on a fare freeze, 2.5% per cent tax increase and no reduction in service. It also plans to hire 52 additional bus drivers in 2023. (Trevor Pritchard/CBC)

At the same time, the transit department is contemplating a $53-million shortfall in revenue due to an expected ridership of just 70 per cent compared topre-pandemic levels.

OC Transpo has had to find ways to cut costs. It's saving millions by retiring 117 old buses it doesn't use, and another $42.7 million by deferring work on the delayed segments of Stage 2 andputting offannual contributions to certain capital funds.

Getting rid of the scaffolding is part of those savings, albeit a very small one. Even so, the city still needs at least $39 million from the provincial government to make the transit budget work this year.