Towered
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Rick Leary set a very low bar.Wow, the first time in history a city department didn't hire the absolute worst person for the job! I have my fingers crossed for positive change!
Rick Leary set a very low bar.Wow, the first time in history a city department didn't hire the absolute worst person for the job! I have my fingers crossed for positive change!
I can't wait until people post on Reddit about seeing them dirty and asking why they don't have someone who can wipe them off at the end of the line or how they need to take the bus out of service to clean them.Well there goes fabric seats, and any sense of comfort on TTC buses going forward:
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‘Plastic seats over comfort,’ TTC says it’s continuing to remove fabric seats from buses after hygiene complaints - NOW Toronto
Torontonians have been urgently calling for a change to fabric seats on buses, but the TTC assures that a solution is on the way.nowtoronto.com
Well there goes fabric seats, and any sense of comfort on TTC buses going forward:
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‘Plastic seats over comfort,’ TTC says it’s continuing to remove fabric seats from buses after hygiene complaints - NOW Toronto
Torontonians have been urgently calling for a change to fabric seats on buses, but the TTC assures that a solution is on the way.nowtoronto.com
The original H5/6 seating was basically the same as the H4 in terms of seat covering, but without benches.It sucks but it's not like we are going from H4 to H5 seating.
And how is the current cloth fabric any less of a fire hazard (if not more so)?That and they were somewhat of a fire hazard.
The H4 seating had seat padding that was a lot thicker compared to the H5 and H6s.Honestly I have to agree that H4 style and NYC style seats are the better option for transit in terms of being easy to clean (and in NYC's case, vandalproof). They might as well switch to NYC seats, not like the current ones are significantly more comfortable anyway.
The original H5/6 seating was basically the same as the H4 in terms of seat covering, but without benches.
And how is the current cloth fabric any less of a fire hazard (if not more so)?
The fact of the matter is, the TTC is doing this because of costs/easier maintenance. They can try and sugar coat it and disguise it under whatever BS they want to, because most riders would agree that fabric seats are much more comfortable and I'm willing to bet the survey they conducted earlier said it. The issue riders have with the fabric seats is the level of cleanliness of them, and that boils down to cleaning standards/practices. Something that has taken a big hit throughout the years at the TTC.
It’s not like a plastic seat would be dry either, though.And there is nothing wrong with that, considering the constraints. In any case, any notion of comfort could easily dispelled after you had accidentally sat on a urine (or lord knows what other bodily-fluids) soaked felt seat.
AoD
I much prefer the cloth seats. However, some spills are not visible on the cloth seatsIt’s not like a plastic seat would be dry either, though.
I'm not necessarily sure we can call them constraints, the TTC outsourced cleaning for the past ~5+ years on vehicles. As part of the new contract that was made between the TTC and city last year, some cleaning jobs have been brought back in house to the TTC.And there is nothing wrong with that, considering the constraints. In any case, any notion of comfort could easily dispelled after you had accidentally sat on a urine (or lord knows what other bodily-fluids) soaked felt seat.
AoD
(My emphasis)And to add, i've seen plenty of plastic seats which have been heavily stained by urine and who knows what else. Good luck cleaning it off, because it's almost just as hard/if not harder. Essentially, those seats have to be replaced (just like the fabric seats have been when they are heavily stained/damaged).
I dont disagree that fabric is harder to clean then plastic. I'm simply referring to when both are already very heavily stained.(My emphasis)
I disagree. I work in healthcare. Non-absorbent surfaces are absolutely able to be cleaned and sanitized. We cannot have absorbent surfaces (including wood and cloth) at work.




