Ottawa

Reliable trains, not buses, needed to restore faith in LRT: commissioner

Volunteer transit commissioner Sarah Wright-Gilbert welcomed the mayor's announcement about increasing bus service Friday, but she says they don't address the core problems facing Ottawa's light rail line.

40 buses being taken out of retirement to bolster routes that feed the LRT

Sarah Wright-Gilbert, a citizen transit commissioner, says the blame for problems with Ottawa's LRT don't fall solely on Peter Lauch. (Matthew Kupfer/CBC)

One of Ottawa's transit commissioners is welcoming Mayor Jim Watson's promise to increase bus service, but says that's not enough to restore the confidence of frustrated LRT riders.

Sarah Wright-Gilbert said she wished public officials had been discussing the ongoing light rail problems more openly, rather than having things culminate with a dramatic response from the mayor after two separate problems snarled Friday morning's commute.

"I wish this step had been taken several weeks ago and that we hadn't gotten to what I think was a breaking point," she told CBC News.

The mayor has announced 40 buses are being taken out of retirement to bolster routes that feed the LRT, including the 39, which Wright-Gilbert said has serious overcrowding problems.

"It doesn't really solve the underlying issue, which is the reliability of the trains," she said. "Until we have reliable trains, the public's confidence is not going to be there in our very expensive multi-modal system."

Chided for criticism

Wright-Gilbert, an unpaid volunteer on the transit commission, raised issues about the lack of buses, overcrowding and poor communication earlier this week. 

Coun. Allan Hubley, the chair of the transit commission, subsequently criticized her for undermining confidence in the system.

Wright-Gilbert told CBC that Hubley's comments were very distressing and made it difficult for her to go on with her work.

"To be made the reason why people have lost confidence in the system ... that comment was not only tone-deaf, it was insulting," she said. 

After Watson tweeted that he was "furious" with the LRT problems, he was asked if Wright-Gilbert was owed an apology. The mayor said the transit commissioner was expressing frustration, and that people are free to tweet if they want.

For her part, Wright-Gilbert said she is looking forward to next week's transit commission meeting, when transportation services manager John Manconi is expected to explain the fixes to the issues dogging the Confederation Line.

That meeting — the first since the LRT launched in mid-September — takes place Nov. 6.