Toronto Star

STOPPED IN THEIR TRACKS

Parked cars leave streetcar riders stuck in the deep freeze,

- ALEXANDRA JONES AND JACK HAUEN STAFF REPORTERS

The TTC is telling Toronto drivers to smarten up after a number of cars parked too close to streetcar tracks caused delays on some of the city’s busiest surface routes this week.

“Everybody needs to keep in mind that we share the road,” TTC spokespers­on Hayley Waldman said when asked about a series of streetcar backups since Monday night’s blizzard.

“Everybody’s trying to get where they need to go and, obviously, when a streetcar isn’t able to get from Point A to Point B, there are a lot of customers on board who are going to be delayed.”

Waldman said she did not know exactly how many delays have been caused by drivers parked too close to streetcar tracks since the storm.

The “mountains” of snow piled up on city streets are contributi­ng to the problem, she said.

Drivers who block traffic in this way can be fined $60, said Brian Moniz, supervisor of Toronto Police Parking Enforcemen­t Operations. Depending on where the vehicle is located, the tow fine can be anywhere between $200-$300.

Since the blizzard, Moniz said nine tickets have been issued involving drivers blocking streetcars.

Allyson Quinn was travelling to visit a friend Tuesday evening when her 506 Carleton streetcar stopped, then lingered longer than usual.

The driver stepped out, then got back on and made an announceme­nt, she said: An Audi was blocking the streetcar. The streetcar driver would have to call a tow truck. It could take a long time.

Quinn said she waited on the stopped streetcar for about 20 minutes before she and most other passengers decided to walk.

“It was freezing,” she said. “The wind was blowing, and I just felt so bad for the seniors.”

Temperatur­es Tuesday night reached a low of -15 C.

Quinn said the driver told her it was the 30th similar incident he’d heard of that day alone.

The Audi’s driver should have known the SUV was on the streetcar tracks, Quinn said, adding it was “a good couple feet out from the snowbank.”

The driver “obviously just didn’t want to be anywhere near the snowbank,” she said.

In a separate incident, Twitter user @giulio_plans posted on Tuesday photograph­s of at least 10 streetcars and buses backed up on Broadview Ave. because the driver of a dark SUV had parked too close to the tracks. In one photograph, the line of TTC vehicles, marked by their glowing blue lights, stretches so far down Broadview Ave., it curves out of sight around the corner.

That stretch of Broadview Ave. is used by the 304 and 504 King streetcars and the 505 Dundas line, which is temporaril­y running buses.

Another photo, which sparked a vibrant discussion on Reddit Wednesday, shows another streetcar blocked on King St. E., stuck behind a parked Audi convertibl­e.

A photo posted to Twitter on Tuesday shows a King streetcar blocked by a BMW parked on Broadview Ave.

Yet another pic, posted Tuesday morning, shows a different 506 streetcar blocked by a Mazda. Drivers blocking TTC routes is a “growing concern,” former Toronto police parking enforcemen­t officer Kyle Ashley said.

In the past, tickets were given out too freely to drivers who parked their cars too far from the curb, Ashley said. Now, those tickets require a supervisor’s sign-off and this means it’s difficult to catch everyone parking too close to streetcar tracks, especially during a snowstorm, when TTC personnel is already stretched thin.

City crews have been working hard, day and night, to clear snow from Monday’s storm, said city spokespers­on Eric Holmes, who added that their response has been “in line with council-approved levels of snow-clearing service.”

The response has been especially difficult, he said, because the city was forecast to get be- tween seven and 20 centimetre­s of snow Monday night, but received as much as 30 centimetre­s in some places. It’s a total the city hasn’t been reached since 2008.

A streetcar operator who encounters a blockade on the road has to first let customers know that there might be a delay, Waldman said, and then notify traffic control, which can contact city parking enforcemen­t for a tow truck.

If service behind the streetcar is getting significan­tly delayed, the TTC then tries to reroute service, or bring on buses to support the streetcars.

According to Don Peat, a spokespers­on for Mayor John Tory, the city’s general manager of Transporta­tion Services has the power to declare a major snow event, in which parking on roads designated as snow routes is prohibited f or 72 hours in order to assist the city in snow cleanup following a storm, but has not done so in roughly 20 years.

“Transporta­tion Service staff have reviewed the condition of the Snow Routes following this storm and confirmed that a declaratio­n was not required,” Peat said.

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 ?? @GIULIO_PLANS TWITTER ?? At least 10 streetcars and buses were backed up on Broadview Ave. because the driver of a dark SUV parked too close to the tracks.
@GIULIO_PLANS TWITTER At least 10 streetcars and buses were backed up on Broadview Ave. because the driver of a dark SUV parked too close to the tracks.

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