Hamilton

HSR workers should operate Hamilton's new LRT system: Jackson

Tom Jackson says he'll bring a motion to city council soon to keep LRT operations and maintenance jobs local.

Tom Jackson says he'll bring a motion to city council soon to keep LRT operations and maintenance jobs local

The design has LRT running in the same lanes as cars on James Street North. (City of Hamilton)

A Hamilton Mountain city councillor says he wants to make sure local HSR drivers operate the city's new light rail transit (LRT) system — and that any revenue the system generates stays local.

The local jobs, for me, are incredibly important.- Tom Jackson, Ward 6 councillor

Tom Jackson, Ward 6 city councillor, says he'll soon bring a motion to the council table pressing for LRT jobs to stay local.

That means he wants HSR staff — not Metrolinx — to operate LRT. And he wants to have any revenue generated used for the benefit of the local transit system.

"The local jobs, for me, are incredibly important," Jackson said.

"The local jobs component, and HSR maintaining and operating the system, should seriously be part and parcel of LRT going forward."

This rendering shows what LRT could look like in west Hamilton. (Metrolinx/City of Hamilton)

Jackson's effort matches the stance of the Amalgamated Transit Union Local 107, which represents HSR drivers. President Eric Tuck said he's approached all the councillors about this.

It's about public control of our transit system.- Eric Tuck, Amalgamated Transit Union Local 107

Tuck doesn't want LRT to result in local job losses.

"More importantly," he said, "it's about public control of our transit system."

The LRT will run along a critical route through Hamilton's lower city.

The $1 billion system, which the province is funding and Metrolinx is building in consultation with the city, will run alternately along Main and King Streets from McMaster University to the Queenston traffic circle. It will also run down James Street North to the West Harbour GO station.

Coun. Tom Jackson says he supports LRT as long as any buses freed up from the system go to the Mountain. He also wants HSR staff to operate and maintain it so the jobs stay local (Samantha Craggs/CBC)

Metrolinx will own the system. But who will run and maintain LRT, and what will happen to the fare revenue, is still being negotiated. Revenue and ridership projects are still being determined too, said spokesperson Kelly Anderson.

The B-line route along the King-Main-Queenston corridor isn't the busiest single route in Hamilton, the city says. But it is certainly well used.

In 2015, the city says, there were 9.2 million rides alone routes 1, 5, 10 and 51 in that corridor. System wide, Hamilton's total ridership was 21,906,762 trips.

The city says it doesn't know how much revenue the B line generated, since it doesn't track revenue by route. In general, fare box revenue covers about 47 per cent of the cost of operating HSR.

Eric Tuck, president of the Amalgamated Transit Union Local 107, takes a photo last June as Premier Kathleen Wynne announces $1 billion for LRT in Hamilton. Tuck says his union is in favour of LRT, but has reservations about who will operate it. He also wants the revenue to stay local. (Samantha Craggs/CBC)

Tuck said fare revenue and local jobs aren't his only concerns. HSR ridership also determines how much Hamilton gets from provincial gas tax revenue. So those numbers still have to count.

In 2015, for example, the city got $10.7 million from the provincial gas tax. Of that, $10,440,516 went to conventional transit, including $9,227,102 toward operating it and $1,213,414 for capital.

The formula for how much Hamilton gets, the city says, is based 70 per cent on transit ridership and 30 per cent on population.

Federal gas tax revenue, meanwhile, goes mostly toward road repairs. Hamilton received about $33 million in federal gas tax revenue in 2015. Of that, about $30 million went to road repairs, and the rest went to transit.

A rendering shows LRT in the central lower city near Tim Hortons Field stadium. (City of Hamilton)

At city council, LRT is still a hot debate topic. Some councillors — namely Chad Collins of Ward 5, who wants a referendum on it in 2018 — are skeptical of the plan.

But Jackson said he's a fan of LRT as long as the province pays for it, and any surplus buses go the Mountain, where he said they're needed.

"My continued support (of LRT) is conditional on that," he said.

On that point, Mayor Fred Eisenberger seems to be listening. In May, he asked the city to look into redeploying any buses freed up by LRT to the Mountain. 

samantha.craggs@cbc.ca | @SamCraggsCBC