The Hamilton Spectator

National task force called on as transit attacks escalate

Violent incidents have reached ‘crisis levels,’ transit union president says

- JORDAN OMSTEAD

Violent attacks on public transit have reached “crisis levels,” the president of a major Canadian transit union said Wednesday, as he called for a national transit safety task force.

The task force must include transit agencies from across the country and representa­tives from all levels of government, said Amalgamate­d Transit Union Canada national president John Di Nino.

“These attacks, not only at the Toronto Transit Commission) but right across the country, are really at a crisis level,” Di Nino said Wednesday. “We’re seeing operator assaults, violence against transit workers, and now our riders at an alarming rate across this country.”

A task force should consider whether de-escalation training, harsher penalties, increased mental health funding, better housing supports and greater police presence could help prevent violence on transit, Di Nino said.

The call for a task force came after a number of violent attacks targeting workers and riders on the Toronto Transit Commission.

In recent days, police have said a woman was stabbed on a streetcar, two uniformed TTC workers were assaulted on their way to work, a TTC driver was shot with a BB gun, and a person wearing a religious head covering was hit at a subway station in an alleged hate-motivated assault. On Wednesday, a person was arrested after allegedly chasing two TTC workers with a syringe.

Last month, a woman was stabbed to death and another was injured in a random attack on a Toronto subway train.

Transit agencies need to be transparen­t about the extent of the safety issue, Di Nino said, calling for transparen­t reporting of violent incidents. Up to 3,000 transit operator or passenger assaults happen across Canada annually, he said, though more likely go unreported.

“We can ill afford to keep saying ‘our thoughts and prayers’ and ‘our best wishes go’ and ‘this is a one-off.’ That time has passed,” Di Nino said. “We need to have these discussion­s now.”

When asked about transit safety on Tuesday, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said the federal government will continue to work with provinces and cities to ensure Canadians are safe.

“If there is a role for the federal government to step up, we will no doubt step up,” he said. “It’s something we are happy to partner with provinces and municipali­ties on.”

In a statement, Ontario’s Ministry of Transporta­tion said it is deeply concerned with the increase in violence and open to discussion­s about how to keep Ontario’s public transit systems safe.

“Transit workers play an essential role in ensuring Ontarians can get where they need to go every day, and they, along with commuters, deserve to feel safe,” said Dakota Brasier, press secretary for Transporta­tion Minister Caroline Mulroney.

TTC spokespers­on Stuart Green said the transit agency welcomed the call for a national task force and “out-of-the-box thinking” to address violence on transit since it can’t deal with the issue alone.

 ?? A R LY N MCADOREY THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Police surround a streetcar after a stabbing incident in Toronto on Tuesday. A call for a task force comes after a number of violent attacks targeting workers and riders on the TTC.
A R LY N MCADOREY THE CANADIAN PRESS Police surround a streetcar after a stabbing incident in Toronto on Tuesday. A call for a task force comes after a number of violent attacks targeting workers and riders on the TTC.

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