jys
Active Member
A few updates I wrote down from last week's Transit Advisory Committee meeting:
Hydrogen Buses
- the original hydrogen bus pilot with Canadian Urban Transit Research and Innovation Consortium (CUTRIC) was canceled due to a lack of funding
- but it's now been restarted with new partners (New Flyer Industries, Cummins, Enbridge + more)
-- new project has received partial funding (through the federal Zero Emission Transit Fund), but funding challenges remain
-- project target is to have 10 hydrogen fuel cell buses on the road (presumably once full funding is received)
Hybrid Buses
- are already geo-fenced to go into electric-mode (battery only) at City Center Transit Terminal (CCTT) and Central Pkwy Garage
- this geo-fencing is being piloted on a subset of buses for 9 additional sites
West Credit Garage
- currently pegged at $500 Million
- targeted for completion in 2028, pending funding from other levels of government (Councillor Horneck stated that city does not have money for this)
UTM-related
- a delegation from the university discussed overcrowding on routes frequented by university students (44, 110, 1, 101)
-- in response to a question about having more routes serve UTM, staff mentioned capacity constraints at the UTM terminal
- UTM delegation reported issues with scanning the digital U-Pass on Presto readers (takes a long time, sometimes wouldn't work, isolated reports of students being denied boarding as a result)
Service-related
(planned service changes covered by MiExpress above)
- when pressed if MiWay can increase service by more than 4% next year, staff stated that 6% increase in service is practical max
- discussion about fares (which are currently frozen), whether increasing it by 10 cents will allow the cash-strapped MiWay to provide more service
- in response to a question, staff stated that MiWay service levels in 2019 and 2023 are roughly equivalent
-- this was later disputed by Christian Parise (in his deputation), who presented analysis showing a 9% reduction (170K less service hours)
-- at this point the meeting was over 3 hours, so we asked MiWay staff to meet with Mr. Parise to figure things out; matter will be a priority at the next meeting
Next Meeting
- was scheduled for December
- moved up to November 7th to occur before the budget approval
@drum118 nice to finally meet you in person
Mark
Hydrogen Buses
- the original hydrogen bus pilot with Canadian Urban Transit Research and Innovation Consortium (CUTRIC) was canceled due to a lack of funding
- but it's now been restarted with new partners (New Flyer Industries, Cummins, Enbridge + more)
-- new project has received partial funding (through the federal Zero Emission Transit Fund), but funding challenges remain
-- project target is to have 10 hydrogen fuel cell buses on the road (presumably once full funding is received)
Hybrid Buses
- are already geo-fenced to go into electric-mode (battery only) at City Center Transit Terminal (CCTT) and Central Pkwy Garage
- this geo-fencing is being piloted on a subset of buses for 9 additional sites
West Credit Garage
- currently pegged at $500 Million
- targeted for completion in 2028, pending funding from other levels of government (Councillor Horneck stated that city does not have money for this)
UTM-related
- a delegation from the university discussed overcrowding on routes frequented by university students (44, 110, 1, 101)
-- in response to a question about having more routes serve UTM, staff mentioned capacity constraints at the UTM terminal
- UTM delegation reported issues with scanning the digital U-Pass on Presto readers (takes a long time, sometimes wouldn't work, isolated reports of students being denied boarding as a result)
Service-related
(planned service changes covered by MiExpress above)
- when pressed if MiWay can increase service by more than 4% next year, staff stated that 6% increase in service is practical max
- discussion about fares (which are currently frozen), whether increasing it by 10 cents will allow the cash-strapped MiWay to provide more service
- in response to a question, staff stated that MiWay service levels in 2019 and 2023 are roughly equivalent
-- this was later disputed by Christian Parise (in his deputation), who presented analysis showing a 9% reduction (170K less service hours)
-- at this point the meeting was over 3 hours, so we asked MiWay staff to meet with Mr. Parise to figure things out; matter will be a priority at the next meeting
Next Meeting
- was scheduled for December
- moved up to November 7th to occur before the budget approval
@drum118 nice to finally meet you in person
Mark