British Columbia

Expect scattered delays on Metro Vancouver bus routes Friday, TransLink warns, as job action escalates

Bus drivers will refuse overtime starting today as part of escalating job action, a move that is expected to reduce overall bus service by up to 10 per cent.

Overall bus service expected to be reduced by up to 10% as drivers refuse overtime

Passengers disembark a TransLink bus in Vancouver on Friday. Commuters have been warned to expect delays throughout the day as transit operators ramp up job action. (Maggie MacPherson/CBC)

Commuters huddled in the rain at bus stops across Metro Vancouver will likely be waiting longer than usual for their bus during rush hour Friday evening, with drivers now refusing overtime as part of escalating job action.

TransLink said service will be significantly affected across the region throughout the day, most severely in Vancouver. Dozens of bus trips were cancelled in the city alone Friday morning.

Bus driver unavailability means buses are running less frequently. Service is being further hampered by a lack of available vehicles due to maintenance workers also refusing to pull overtime in order to keep buses in shape.

Buses that are running may be overcrowded.

Transit users wait to catch a bus in Vancouver on Nov. 1, 2019. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

Unifor, the union representing 5,000 Coast Mountain Bus Company workers, said the ban on overtime for bus drivers could force delays or cancellations on as many as 15 per cent of bus routes across the Lower Mainland.

TransLink said commuters can check on delays for their route by checking transit alerts

"We expect Vancouver is going to be hardest hit," TransLink spokesperson Ben Murphy told CBC's The Early Edition on Friday morning.

"We want to ensure that anyone travelling in and out of Vancouver signs up for transit alerts ... to make sure that they're able to get the latest information available because we are expecting that there will be significant inconveniences there."

By Friday evening there were close to 300 alerts posted on TransLink's website, the majority of them related to bus cancellations and delays. 

The 41 B-Line usually arrives every three to six minutes during rush hour. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

The ban was felt in downtown Vancouver late Thursday when a bus brought down trolley wires at a busy intersection. The crossing was closed until early Friday when maintenance crews became available to effect repairs.

Ten more SeaBus sailings are also cancelled Friday:

  • The 7:20 a.m., 9 a.m., 4:10 p.m., 7:32 p.m., 8:47 p.m. sailings from Lonsdale Quay.
  • The 7:35 a.m., 9:15 a.m., 4:25 p.m., 7:46 p.m. and 9:01 p.m. sailings from Waterfront.

The job action by Unifor members began Nov. 1 with an overtime ban by mechanics that prompted the almost immediate cancellation of numerous SeaBus sailings and delays or cancellations on dozens of bus routes.

"If I'm not busing I'm going to have to walk for 40 minutes so that definitely affects [my commute] for sure," said Emily Carr student Tenaya Fogelman, who hopes the situation will be resolved quickly. 

UBC student Areeb Iqbel also expressed his concerns, noting delays and cancellations can have a big impact on students. "I don't even have my licence," he said. 

A key issue in the dispute, Unifor said, is a $3-per-hour wage disparity between mechanics who maintain buses and mechanics in a different union doing the same job on SkyTrain cars.

"[They're] still trying to pretend that TransLink is made up of multiple companies instead of one enterprise so they don't pay the skilled trades workers at Coast Mountain anywhere close to what they pay them at SkyTrain," Unifor western director Gavin McGarrigle said Friday.

"There's simply no justification for not paying them the same as other skilled trades workers within TransLink. They're the same qualifications."

CMBC said Thursday it offered an enhanced proposal for working conditions, but wage demands over the increases it has already offered would come at the expense of customer service and it's time for the union to compromise.

A TransLink bus driver wore a football jersey instead of his Coast Mountain Bus Company unifor on Friday as part of job action in Vancouver on Nov. 1, 2019. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

The company said its offer also included pay increases of $6,100 annually on the top wage for drivers over the next four years, and $10,000 for skilled trades. The bump would bring the top annual wages to $69,900 for drivers and $88,000 for skilled trades.

Murphy said company's offer "is well in excess of public sector settlements in British Columbia today."

The TransLink spokesperson said Metro Vancouver transit drivers make less than those in Toronto "due to the market conditions ... and demand" in the western region. The spokesperson noted bus drivers in other Canadian cities like Victoria, Ottawa and Montreal make less than those in Metro Vancouver.

Unifor said it will continue its ban on overtime for drivers on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays until a contract is reached.

SkyTrain negotiations

Unifor's job action is not the only transit problem facing Metro Vancouver commuters.

Talks between CUPE Local 7000 and the B.C. Rapid Transit Company, which handles SkyTrain service on the Expo and Millennium lines, collapsed Tuesday.

The union said workers have been without a contract since August.

Wages and staffing levels are several of the items on the table.

CUPE Local 7000 has not yet conducted a strike vote, so job action is not imminent. Any action would not affect the Canada Line between Vancouver and Richmond, or the West Coast Express commuter train between Vancouver and the Fraser Valley.

Canada Line and West Coast Express workers are represented by other unions.

With files from the Canadian Press and CBC's The Early Edition