Transit advocacy group calls for increased service - Action News
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Windsor

Transit advocacy group calls for increased service

A transit advocacy group in Windsor-Essex is calling for more frequent and more reliable service after asking the public what they think of the system.

Survey respondents said they'd take transit if it service was more frequent and reliable

Transit Windsor (Jennifer La Grassa/CBC)

A transit advocacy group in Windsor-Essex is calling for more frequent and reliable service after asking the public what they think of the system.

Activate Transit Windsor Essex has formed what it calls a community mandate after conducting an online survey of 620 peoplelast year.

According to the group, the overwhelming majority of people who participated around nineout of 10 said they would take transit more often if the buses came more often and on time.

"There are more people in the city that would love to use transit if the system worked better for them," said Jessica Bondy, co-founder of the group.

The report's findings also suggested that the transit system was a barrier to employment for some people.

"You're much less likely to use the bus if you're employed full time, and that's because the schedules don't work. Maybe ...your work end time is pastwhen the bus is even running," Bondy said.

The groupis also calling for actions including increasedtransit funding, extending operating hours and the speedy implementation of Windsor's Transit Master Plan, which was approved by council in 2020.

Tyson Cragg, the executive director of Transit Windsor, said that many of the concerns brought up by the group are being addressed in the master plan.

In the last few years, the transit agency hasadded 15,000 service hours to the system, including adding a new route, 518X, he said.

A sign read Transit Windsor with a bus in the back.
Transit Windsor is operating on an enhanced Saturday schedule on weekdays amid lower ridership. (Jennifer La Grassa/CBC)

"I think in terms of advancement of the master plan, we have to put into context that we are in the middle of a pandemic and our ridership is significantly lower than it was prior to that, and we're trying to make changes and make improvements while recognizing that we're in a challenging environment," he said.

The bus service has about 15,000 unique riders each day, but numbers are still under 60 per cent of pre-pandemic levels, he said.

Currently, the bus system in Windsor is on an enhanced Saturday schedule on weekdays due to the pandemic. Transit Windsor is looking to return to the regularschedule in September.

'Always a bus in 10 minutes'

Several transit riders who spoke with CBC Windsor on Friday had few complaints.

Tim Pare has been riding the bus for about eight years and is satisfied with the service.

"The buses are always on time, within five minutes from what I've seen," he said.

"And I think it's just our nature to complain," he said in reference to the survey's findings.

KunjBarmar has been using transit for about six months. He'd be happy to see his busroute come by more frequently but had high praise for the system overall.

"I would rate it 10 out of 10 because it's extremely good and its been accurate," he said.

PiyushJindal, a St. Clair College student, has been using the bus for around three months.

He says the service is OK he'd give it aseven of out of 10 but he has hadissues with the timing.

"The frequencies are good;there's always a bus in 10 minutes," he said.

Keshab Sharma, who has experience with the transit systems in the Greater Toronto Area, wants to see the bus arrival times line up better with what's appearing in Google Maps. He'd also like to see buses come more often.

"The bus service should be more frequent on theseroutes that are busy routes," he said.

With files from Kerri Breen, Chris Ensing and Dale Molnar