TTC announces slower subway service and people are very pissed off
The TTC announced a lengthy list of reduced speed zones on the subway network on Friday, and it didn't take long for this latest decline in public transit service to incense commuters.
The transit agency stated on Friday that subway operators "may be asked by Transit Control to reduce their speed through a certain area of the subway system as a safety precaution due to crews at track level or ongoing maintenance being performed on the tracks," accompanied by a list of 21 stretches of track where riders can expect slower travel times.
Affected stretches of track include 15 portions of Line 1 and another six sections of Line 2:
The announcement has enraged riders, many of whom were already frustrated with spotty TTC service.
swear it would be easier to list where there isn't a restriction at this point jesus christ
— Daniel Mackay (@useless2764) February 10, 2024
Public transit expert Steve Munro posted a thread on X explaining the reasoning behind the service slowdowns, which are apparently just the latest blowback from the 2023 Scarborough RT derailment and subsequent permanent closure of the line.
(3) In the wake of the SRT derailment, the TTC conducted a detailed inspection of its subway track, and these slow orders are the result. How much of the TTC is falling apart thanks to "we can get by" budgets? TTC management have a lot to answer for.
— Steve Munro (@SwanBoatSteve) February 12, 2024
One user even created an updated map of the TTC's subway network, showing commuters a more realistic visualization of the system.
And here's what it'd look like if every RSV was shown on the map. Embarrassing. pic.twitter.com/VfYaDupIPm
— Gabe Lerman・ラーマン ゲイブ (@gabelerman) February 10, 2024
It didn't take long for these slowdowns to contribute to cascading chaos on the network, with the TTC announcing "major delays" on Line 1 to kick off the Monday morning rush hour.
Line 1 Yonge-University: Major delays northbound from Dundas to Finch due to reduced speed zones and prior delay. https://t.co/KvBVx7KP3P
— TTC Service Alerts (@TTCnotices) February 12, 2024
The TTC's announcement of these speed reduction zones came on the eve of a fifth consecutive weekend closure on the subway network — one of just 22 full-weekend closures planned for 2024 alone as the transit agency rushes to keep tracks and stations from crumbling into disrepair.
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