dewline: Text - "On the DEWLine" (Default)
I watched the city's transit commission have their monthly meeting via YouTube this morning. It was busy, it was informative, and I've got some notes to work through in case there's something that might actually be helpful to someone to post my more detailed impressions.

My left shoulder is stiff and achey after last night's sleep. So's the elbow on that side.

I think I actually got seven hours' sleep last night, and I did have dreams. Not clear on the details of the dream this time, beyond "no domesticated crustaceans acting like puppies this time". I think that was a one-off incident. There are experts I can consult about that imagery tomorrow if I feel the need.

Job search continues.

More as I think of it.
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Public transit...there's a topic.

My understanding of the current state of OC Transpo and STO across the river in Gatineau goes like this: the buses and trains here are usually, at worst, ¾ empty. Everyone aboard has mostly managed to keep their distance from each other, and masks are standard good-manners practice. I can't afford to not use it if I want to leave my neighbourhood to do anything outside of it.

I keep paying for my monthly bus pass despite my lack of usage because they're a continuing target for deficit hawks, and they need the money to maintain the facilities and fleets for when Pandemic is finally over. Even if the levels of demand-for-service stay reduced afterward, the transit services have to be able to do their work safely.
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Before we started building the Confederation Line and Lines 1 and 2 were still bus routes, like it says. Route 2 ran a length spanning from Blair Transitway Station - near Gloucester Centre, and CSIS HQ - and Bayshore Mall. Which was pretty much most of the city back then.

Number 2 in Hintonberg
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As I said in the comments:

YES. This is exactly the point. Transit preserves civil society. Therefore it must be protected and defended, even as we defend funding for police, firefighting, public broadcasting, etc..

https://www.citylab.com/perspective/2020/04/coronavirus-public-transit-subway-bus-ridership-revenue/609556/
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I rode the O-Train all the way between Blair and Tunney's Pasture, both ways. The first, westward leg of the trip was interrupted by a stop at Rideau Station to pick up my preferred out-of-town newspapers. But even so, a round trip by way of Line 1 was achieved. Line 2 was already taken care of due to previous errands to the South Keys Mall in the years before Line 1 was ready to roll. I might upload some of the pix I took at Tunney's to my Flickr account later today as evidence, whether that evidence is needed or not.

I do get a sense of Transitway stations becoming more...fortress-like when they get converted to add O-Train service to their repertoire. Particularly at Blair, St. Laurent, Hurdman and Tunney's is where this effect kicks in. The extra cameras, the staff on duty trying to guide passengers in the newer-to-us ways of using light passenger rail, and the longer walks required to get between buses and trains in whichever directions we need to be going. And if I want to keep musing like this, I should probably write a purpose-built essay for Spacing Ottawa on the subject.
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I used to live in Regina. For a decade. Until I graduated high school. So this lead-in-the-water issue matters. Yes, it was decades ago. But I'm not sure that it matters.

Depending on which other cities and towns are affected to what degrees, that problem might be a contributing factor in the "Wexit" mess. Certainly not the only one. I expect international oil industry money has a hand in it, too. And a century or so's worth of cultural conditioning going back to fostering of resentment of Laurier's decision to not allow One Big Province where Alberta and Saskatchewan now stand. You could call Frederick Haultain a political ancestor of Manning, Klein, Kenney and Wall as a result of this 1905 mess.

There's the ongoing transit confusions. More wordage needed than I can spare right now for that. Because I've got to get to work shortly.
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This morning's transit adventures, I could have given a miss to.

For that matter, so could a lot of other passengers of bus and rail in the eastern reaches of Ottawa.

Took the local feeder to Blair to catch the train, but the train looked at least 20 minutes away by the time I got there. So I went back down to Level One to grab an R1 - the Line 1 "when the train's not running when it should be" substitute bus - and that took a winding set of side streets from Blair to Hurdman. At that point, it was climbing the stairs to the upper platforms where the trains were finally making their runs again. The outdoor, open-air stairs. Which look great in the summer, but more of us suspect that the looks of them is going to be a pain in the winter months.

By the time I got into the day job - despite leaving at my usual time of 620 AM which usually leaves me getting into Centretown by 725 AM, with about half an hour to take care of banking and shopping chores along the walking route - I was instead fifteen minutes late. As it turns out, my job-site supervisor had been dealing with similar transit pains of their own over the last few weeks, and so was entirely empathetic to the situation.

You can gather from the news linkages I've added in that this is a continuing issue. I'd been lucky up to this morning myself, but that was not going to last.

Misadventure, of a minor sort. A First-or-Second-World Problem at worst, right?
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So we're winding down an era of public transit history here on the Ottawa side of the river this weekend.

Route 95 was part of my life from the day I started taking classes at Algonquin. Since I live on the other end of the city - even pre-amalgamation, this was true - from the Baseline campus, Route 95 was an essential component of getting around town. Officially, I lived in Gloucester for the first year, Cumberland for the second, and my classes were in Nepean. But, still...it was all Ottawa, or it was all going to have to become one Ottawa eventually. Mike Harris' shotgun civic marriage plans in the works or not.

Route 95 was the glue that was binding them together. And now, supposedly, the O-Train Confederation Line is taking over from that. The vision is incomplete for now, but Phase 2 pre-construction tree-clearing and suchlike is underway. So that's going to happen. Barring a total disaster in federal and provincial funding not coming through, which...I suppose is possible in the next three weeks once the 2019 federal election is done.

It makes getting around town a little more complicated than it was. No more single-route bus-rides straight into Centretown and Lowertown West/ByWard Market and Sandy Hill.

It's going to take some adjustment.

First Day

Sep. 16th, 2019 06:11 am
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Good morning.

Just heading off to work in a minute. I think I'll take the bus this morning rather than the train because it's familiar. I need "familiar" today. Will use the train - between Blair and downtown because Blair is where it starts for me - tomorrow to see how it affects my travel time.
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Yes, this is self-repetition.

I don't know if this will make getting around town easier or more difficult yet. I do think OC Transpo is dreaming in VR if they believe this will let them reduce the number of buses in the fleet. Those buses no longer running through the downtown core will be needed to feed into and out of the O-Train lines at least 18 hours a day, 7 days a week. And to feed each other in those places that the O-Train lines don't directly connect. And the trips/hour frequency on all those bus routes will have to amp up.

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottawa/ottawa-lrt-public-launch-date-announced-1.5257419
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Food for thought here. As a suburban citizen of Ottawa-Gatineau, I have troubles on occasion in just getting around my own region of the city, never mind going to other regions without being funnelled through the Centretown/Lowertown/ByWard/Glebe corridors. And a lot of people have jobs that require going around the downtown core to get back and forth between home and work. Affordable housing within walking distance of the job(s) available to us is a luxury good, it seems.

https://ottawastart.com/is-downtown-centric-service-an-lrt-achilles-heel-and-other-notes-from-the-official-plan-report/

https://ottawa.ca/en/city-hall/public-engagement/projects/ottawa-next-beyond-2036-identifying-challenges-unknown-futures
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The casino is across the Kitchissippi (AKA "Ottawa River") in Secteur Hull, Gatineau, QC.

The bus shelter is on Laurier Avenue West in Sandy Hill, Ottawa, ON.

The ad was set up nine years before this posting went up on Dreamwidth. Long since gone.

But the image stuck with me.

Bus Shelters as Adverts
dewline: "Fail" (wrongness)
So we're trying to rebuild an intercity transit network - preferably publicly owned and operated - across Canada. Even if our provincial/territorial and federal governments don't quite realize that the country needs it right now. Certainly, the current management of my birth province of Saskatchewan doesn't realize it yet. That, or they are acting in defiance by using an austerity budget to justify what they've announced intent to do yesterday.

My family used the Saskatchewan Transportation Company when we lived in Saskatchewan. In the absence of a proper passenger rail service, and given the lack of attention given by privately owned bus transit, it was and still is vital to have.
dewline: Text: Education is Not a  Luxury!!! (education)

We now have a clearer sense of how OC Transpo plans to act over the next two years or so as they bring the Confederation Line of the O-Train network online. Some of which makes sense, and some of which strikes me as problematic.

Renumbering of routes, fine. There'll be some weeks of confusion over that, no matter the amount of publicity ahead of time. It can be reduced but won't be completely eliminated. We can cope with this.

Fare reductions for monthly bus passes strike this chronically underemployed citizen as an outright boon. Even though I wonder about the consequences of ending Express routes, it's a financial improvement.

Here's a thing that disturbs me, though, and I ask CBC News to forgive me the direct quotation:

The arrival of light rail in 2018 will save the transit service $14 to $15 million per year in operational costs, Manconi said, because each train will do the job of eight articulated buses, requiring fewer operators.

"There will be a reduction of the workforce. We're just finalizing those numbers now," said Manconi. "We're going to work collaboratively with the union and respect how we do that with our employees and look at various options."

I don't think they fully understand the consequences that many of us are hoping for. Specifically, I'd like to see more trip frequency for local routes within the various neighbourhoods across the city. Also, better connections between neighbourhoods that won't be as well served by usage of the LRT "spinal" routes that we will have starting in 2018. Say, if you want to get from Stittsville to Manotick, or from Orléans to Alta Vista but not by taking the O-Train.

So I can't see a reduction in the work force - drivers, mechanics, etc. - as really being a tolerable option. Logistically or politically. Admittedly, this is an instinctive response on my part, so I expect to see additional information that might answer such concerns.

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One: I've given the go-ahead to one Heather Burgess to use select photos from my Flickr account in creating an audio-enhanced slideshow on the aftermath of the New Edinburgh Fire of 2011. I hope you'll all take a good look at the work put in by Heather and other photographers of the Ottawa region.

Two: Also posted to Flickr as of this morning, the tale of what little I know of a mysterious collapse of a bus stop shelter on one of the main streets of Orléans. No idea what happened to cause that so far. Any thoughts?

If anyone reading this has additional info that might help solve the mystery, I suspect that OC Transpo and/or the Ottawa Police would be glad to hear it!

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On the DEWLine 2.0: Dwight Williams

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