EnviroTO
Senior Member
What are you talking about? The TTC has had 35 years to fix accessibility issues with the transit system. They are building second exits for the safety of their able bodied passengers when stairs have almost no chance of failure, but building single elevators in stations for accessibility and have a really poor history of fixing elevators, escalators, and automated doors quickly. Until the penalty for delayed accessibility is higher than the cost of fixing these problems there will be little incentive for the TTC to prioritize this properly.So no official source at all just some group that doesn't want to work with others but wants to use the courts instead.
The TTC needs to start procuring doors, escalators, and elevators differently with more focus on commonality, durability, simplicity, easily swapped components, and SLAs that ensure quick repair. Also, they need to have a backup plan for when things fail that is not a major burden to their customers.
Imagine if the rule was that if an elevator was out of service the affected station or platform would be taken out of service. How long would able bodied people put up with a sign that says sorry we are really slow at fixing things but follow these easy steps to get off at this station: continue two more stations cross over to the other platform, double back one station, and take the bus to the stop on the street upstairs. Whatever their reaction is, multiply that by the frustration of restricted mobility whole trying to carry out those convoluted instructions.
Yes, if the TTC doesn't meet accessibility standards they do need to be sued. If there is no punishment for not paying taxes then before long nobody will pay taxes and similarly if there is no downside to creating an inaccessible system in a poor state of repair then we will have an inaccessible system in disrepair.