Why does it need to take 4 months. Step 1: Plan to remove all speed restrictions below 40 km/h except for the Highway 27 and Finch curve. Step 2: Test the line with all Alstom execs on board.
It does not need to take four months. That’s the problem: LRT defenders have completely normalised mediocrity.
“Oh, the entire line is shut down because of snow? That’s fine, it’s not as if cold weather is a known condition here.”
“Oh, the trains are running at a crawl? No problem, wouldn’t want the LRT getting a speeding ticket.”
“Oh, another speed restriction? Safety first. The priority is clearly protecting the rails from the trains.”
“Oh, signal issues again? Understandable. We only had a decade to plan this.”
“Oh, testing takes months? Of course. This is cutting-edge 19th-century technology.”
At this point, expectations are so low that basic reliability is treated like a bonus feature. If a system cannot operate in winter, at reasonable speeds, on a straight alignment, then who asked you to build this? Did the Great Leader force it upon Finch West? When’s the military parade?
I’ll keep beating the dead horse and posting comments here and anybody who has a problem can go ride Line 6 and cry about it for 55 minutes (ONE WAY).
That being said, Line 6 can be salvaged, but only if it is treated like real transport infrastructure rather than a toy.
1. Remove unnecessary speed restrictions - Addressed and in progress
2. Implement real signal priority - Addressed and in progress
3. Winterise it properly - not addressed. Snow shutdowns are unacceptable in Toronto. Heated switches, proactive storm protocols, and no discretionary closures for routine weather. I’m sorry, but nobody forced you to build this above ground. Were the people behind this so confident it would be delayed that by the time it opened, Climate Change would eliminate snowfall in Toronto? Please. Also, what are these shelters?
4. Simplify operating rules. Safety culture should prevent accidents, not suppress performance. Over-proceduralisation is killing the line.
5. Run frequent service and build ridership.
Points 1, 2, 4, 5 have been addressed….only 1 and 2 are “in progress”. God only knows when they plan on actually implementing any of these points but even one of these before spring would be a miracle.
As for removing stations, that’s political suicide. That’s just something this line will have to deal with and I hope this is a lesson for all the LRT fanboys here. This is clearly an unsuitable model for Toronto and we don’t need anymore of this crap in the city.