'Pretty embarassing': Halifax advocate shares transit complaints, solutions
CBC
An advocacy group has brought the voices of Halifax Transit users, and some solutions for ongoing problems, to city hall to push for change and accountability.
Douglas Wetmore of It's More than Buses shared feedback from the roughly 50 people who'd taken the group's online survey, as of July, with the transportation standing committee of the Halifax Regional Municipality on Thursday.
"Our hope was to at least put a spotlight on it and get council to be aware," Wetmore said after the meeting.
Wetmore said the most common responses were not new to him: poor reliability across the bus network, wait times can be 30 minutes to an hour, transfers between routes often don't line up, and overcrowded buses on busy routes are driving by waiting passengers without stopping.
"I can no longer rely on the only transit system of Halifax. I don't own a car and relying on the bus is stressful," said one person. Another said, "There's a bus stop on Susie Lake Crescent that is literally just a sign in the grass and there's no sidewalk anywhere near it."
Respondents said accurate and timely information getting flagged to third-party apps like Google is an issue, because delays or cancellations often appear very late, if at all.
Tickets are still a barrier for many residents and tourists, Wetmore said, since only certain grocery stores or pharmacies sell them and passengers need exact change without one. The only terminal selling tickets is at the Macdonald Bridge.
While the city waits for its overdue electronic fare system, Wetmore said a quick fix would be making sure participating grocery or pharmacy chains selling the tickets within the transit boundary offer them at every location.
When asked his thoughts on private citizens pitching their own tactical solutions in the face of ongoing issues, Wetmore said "it's pretty embarrassing that this is the extent that has to go through."
Committee chair and councillor, Waye Mason, agreed the ticket situation is "egregious" while Coun. Patty Cuttell called it "embarrassing."
He said putting an electronic fare option in place is already far too late, adding that back in 2017 Halifax announced a different fare system that was eventually abandoned.
"We think that they're getting by pretty easy, and we want to see council start [to] ask some more difficult questions for Halifax Transit to answer."
Wetmore also told the committee that despite 311 being the place to call for transit complaints and concerns, survey respondents and his own friends rarely hear back from anyone. He said the only time he got a response was when he emailed a complaint to Coun. Tim Outhit.
"That doesn't sound good, so hopefully we'll look into that as a committee," Outhit said.