
Renée Amilcar departs with OC Transpo in a better, but still challenging place
In her farewell statement to Amilcar, City of Ottawa manager Wendy Stephanson said she had always been impressed by Amilcar's ability to be fearless.
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'She's never afraid to make a tough decision or make a decision that might not be the most popular, but in the long run it's best for our community.'
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Some have argued that public transit is in a much stronger position now than it was when Amilcar arrived in Ottawa in 2021. Line 1 performance has improved. Lines 2 and 4 are performing well. Eastern extensions of Phase 2 will open later this year, and the reliability of the bus service has improved, Mayor Mark Sutcliffe said in June.
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But others argue that the jury is still out on New Ways to Bus, the major overhaul of bus routes launched in April that changed dozens of routes, redeploying the limited pool of buses to where ridership was higher.
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Those changes included introducing new routes while retiring others and revising routes to major destinations like hospitals, universities and colleges. For some riders, it was more efficient. For others, it has resulted in commutes so convoluted that a 90-minute bus transfer window no longer works.
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'They called it a consolidation, but it was a reduction,' Grover said. 'Some routes got more frequency, but dozens and dozens had more transfer points.'
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'We need to return to accountability and transparency with the people of Ottawa rather than information control and spin if the people are going to feel comfortable that their city is working for them,' said John Adair, co-lead counsel for the inquiry.
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In the pre-Amicar era, Shantz pointed out, riders depended on texts from other transit users to notify them of significant issues such as a stopped train.
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In the summer of 2023, when Amilcar shut down Line 1, she and other experts answered questions about progress in a daily media conference.
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'She mentioned to me a number of times that she felt it was a cultural shift to be as open and transparent as possible. It has been an extremely different approach,' said Coun. Glen Gower, chair of the city's transit committee.
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'She was very hands-on. I wouldn't be surprised if she worked every day of the week,' Gower said. 'She lived and breathed transit.'
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At the same time, details about technical questions, such as what actually caused the August 2021 derailment, have been sparse. (This past week, the CBC reported that Alstom, which manufactured the trains, claimed in a 2023 report that the tracks fall short of industry standards.)
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'I would like to see a future leader champion for that kind of transparency,' Shantz said. 'We need, in the public interest, to know what is going on.'
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One of the unknowns is whether Line 1 tracks will ultimately have to re-aligned, Shantz said. If so, the public needs to know how long will it take and the contingency plans while it is being done.
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'We could face years of repair,' she said. 'We need to see independent assessments of these things. Otherwise, every year we'll be holding our breath and waiting for the next time the straw breaks the camel's back.'
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Q: Amilcar has been keen to measure the system's performance using data. Has it been valuable?
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A: OC Transpo set an ambitious goal of achieving 99.5 per cent service delivery — a measure of the degree to which planned trips are delivered — for conventional buses on its route network.
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'She really believes that, if your bus and train showed up when you expect them, that's the way to win new riders,' Gower said. 'Price is less of a priority.'
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There are other goals, including measuring whether trips are evenly spaced on frequent routes. The goal in that case is 85 per cent. For less frequent routes, there's a target of 85 per cent for 'punctuality,' which measures whether the bus arrives at the stop no more than one minute early or five minutes late.
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Amilcar has not avoided addressing the gaps between the goal and reality. In April, she said the 98 per cent rate for daily trips in 2024 was 'not good.'
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'When we deliver a 96, 97 or even 98 per cent of the service, it's bad. It's very bad,' she said. Those marks would be great grades in school, 'but not for transit … not for buses. We need to deliver what we planned: 99.5 per cent.'
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In her farewell speech to city council in June, Amilcar said OC Transpo had set the bar high.
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'We aimed for 99.5 per cent service delivery, and I know, with the right funding, we will get there,' she said.
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For transit advocates, 'the right funding' is the big question. This year's transit budget is bigger than ever before, but fares are increasing and service has been pared back, Grover said. For public transit to thrive, it must be made more attractive and that means spending more money, he argues.
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'I can't blame (Amilcar) for the stuff that happed. I would have liked to hear her speak out more for the things she needed. The role of general manager is limited. You're executing a plan. It would be good if the general manager could speak out more and be bolder for what they advocated for,' Grover said.
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Shantz likes to see metrics, but points out they were also available before 2017, although not on as granular a level as now, because transit vehicles are equipped with GPS.
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'There are a few other things I would like to add — like the rider experience,' she said. 'I would like to see a regular pulse on how people are experiencing the system. I would like to see the metrics broken down to compare rush hour to non-rush hour. That's sometimes hidden in the numbers.'
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'It was a good-looking relationship,' said Noah Vineberg, president of Amalgamated Transit Unit Local 279, which represents OC Transpo bus and train operators, maintenance workers, dispatchers and fare inspectors. 'I did like working with her. We had a good dialogue.'
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However, Vineberg said, he has been disappointed by how little has changed. Sore points for drivers have been the scheduling of work and work-life balance. The amount of time scheduled to get from Point A to Point B was not realistic, he added.
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'When it came to taking care of her people, that vision never really came to fruition,' he said.
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In May, union members said they were 'met with silence' at a city council meeting after showing up with a petition demanding higher wages and better working conditions.
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'The members' concerns were always on the back burner,' Vineberg said. 'The train got all the attention, and busing was neglected. It was part of the crisis.'
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Meanwhile, a recruitment campaign has failed to retain workers, he said.
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OC Transpo on-boarded 800 operators within two years, Amilcar told city councillor in June. Vineberg argues that, while plenty of operators were hired, workers were being lost just as fast.
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'There have been a lot of promises that have not been fulfilled,' Vineberg said. 'Morale is at an all-time low. There used to be pride. The pride is gone. We're not satisfied with the service we provide to the public.'
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Amilcar did a good job for transit, Vineberg said. 'She failed to look after some of her own people along the way.'
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A: The solution to the LRT's wheel woes remain elusive. The 'sustainable solution' for Line 1 is an ongoing issue, Gower said. Amilcar was hoping to see a resolution to that before she left Ottawa.
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Modernizing the bus fleet is also on the radar. By 2036, the entire fleet will be electric, a major project that includes new garages and charging stations, Gower said.
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But at this time there aren't enough buses, Grover said. 'Ten years ago, they had a thousand. Now they have 700, and 200 of them are in the garage.'
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It's unclear how much New Ways to Bus fallout there will be when post-secondary students return to campuses in large numbers in September. Route changes had been introduced in late April, when many students had already departed the city.
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Shantz points out that students are the best customers for transit. If they are satisfied with their experience, it will become a habit, and they might even convert their parents. 'We have to make sure its working for them,' she said.
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Other users are not seeing better quality of service, though, Shantz said, citing the example of Para Transpo users who can't rely on same-day bookings.
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'It's frustrating to see service not improve in the ways it can move,' she said. 'Trains are great, but they're not the whole network. We need bread-and-butter fixes.'

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Toronto Sun
a day ago
- Toronto Sun
LILLEY: CBC pushes left-wing political values in effort to cancel Christian singer
But the public broadcaster's news coverage of the 'MAGA musician' has instead made Sean Feucht a much bigger celebrity in Canada Get the latest from Brian Lilley straight to your inbox American musician Sean Feucht had been scheduled to perform in Moncton, N.B., on Thursday, July 24, 2025. Photo by Gage Skidmore/CC BY-SA 2.0 CBC went on a religious war against a Christian singer this past week in an effort to cancel his concerts. Instead, CBC raised the profile of Sean Feucht in Canada and showed just how politicized their news coverage has become. It started several days ago as Canada's public broadcaster went wall to wall with coverage of Feucht's show in Halifax. They described him repeatedly as a 'MAGA musician' and then made it clear to their readers and viewers that Feucht holds views that no Canadian should welcome. 'Sean Feucht is a religious singer from the U.S. who has expressed anti-diversity, anti-2SLGBTQ+ and anti-women's rights views on his platforms,' read one story about his original venue in Halifax being cancelled. Other media outlets joined in the pile on, simply describing Feucht as MAGA and therefore unacceptable. We don't need to tell you more than that, we've already told you that he likes the bad Orange man in the White House – BAN HIM! This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. THIS CONTENT IS RESERVED FOR SUBSCRIBERS ONLY Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Unlimited online access to articles from across Canada with one account. Get exclusive access to the Toronto Sun ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition that you can share, download and comment on. Enjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalists. Support local journalists and the next generation of journalists. Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. SUBSCRIBE TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Unlimited online access to articles from across Canada with one account. Get exclusive access to the Toronto Sun ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition that you can share, download and comment on. Enjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalists. Support local journalists and the next generation of journalists. Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. REGISTER / SIGN IN TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account. Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments. Enjoy additional articles per month. Get email updates from your favourite authors. THIS ARTICLE IS FREE TO READ REGISTER TO UNLOCK. Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments Enjoy additional articles per month Get email updates from your favourite authors Don't have an account? Create Account A protestor chants slogans against pro-Maga and Christian singer Sean Feucht during his performance at Ministerios Restauración in Montreal on Friday, July 25, 2025. Photo by Allen McInnis / MONTREAL GAZETTE The original venues for all six concerts cancelled on him – some reportedly keeping the fees he had already paid. Feucht may not be a household name in Canada, but he has played and toured here many times and he quickly found new venues. The media hype about the dangers of allowing a Christian rocker to perform here kept up and when he played Montreal on Friday night, radical protesters showed up to try and forcibly shut down the show. Montreal police arrest a protester who refused to stop eating on the stairs of Ministerios Restauración during pro-Maga and Christian singer Sean Feucht's performance in Montreal on Friday, July 25, 2025. Photo by Allen McInnis / MONTREAL GAZETTE CBC quoted a spokesperson for Montreal Mayor Valerie Plante saying they believe in freedom of expression but not for this guy. 'Freedom of expression is one of our fundamental values, but hateful and discriminatory speech is not accepted in Montreal and, as in other Canadian cities, the show will not be tolerated,' Catherine Cadotte told CBC . Your noon-hour look at what's happening in Toronto and beyond. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. Please try again This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Mayor Valérie Plante at a press conference on the terrace at City Hall in Montreal on Wednesday, June 11, 2025. Photo by John Mahoney / MONTREAL GAZETTE The mayor's office tried to shut down the show even after it moved from a municipal venue to a church – and the city is now threatening to fine that church. They claimed Feucht didn't have a permit to play and it wouldn't be allowed to go forward, a claim CBC dutifully put to the singer as he spoke with media ahead of the show. 'It's because you don't have a permit,' a CBC-Radio Canada journalist stated to Feucht on the issue of why some wanted his show shut down. 'I don't think you need a permit to worship in a church,' Feucht responded. Feucht, the American, has a better understanding of how our country operates than a CBC journalist, that is truly sad. If we lived in a country fully run by CBC and Montreal Mayor Valerie Plante, then we would have to sign away freedom of religion, freedom of assembly and freedom expression – three fundamental freedoms protected by Canada's Charter of Rights and Freedoms. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Pro-Maga and Christian singer Sean Feucht speaks before his performance at Ministerios Restauración in Montreal on Friday, July 25, 2025. Photo by Allen McInnis / MONTREAL GAZETTE As you can see, there is a selective approach to who gets those rights and freedoms protected. There is a lot of chatter about what kind of musical acts are acceptable these days. Concerts for British punk rap duo Bob Vylan were cancelled after they shouted 'death, death to the IVF' at the Glastonbury music festival. Irish rap group Kneecap are slated to perform four sold-out shows in Toronto and Vancouver later this year but there are calls for them to be banned from Canada for their open support of banned terrorist groups like Hezbollah and Hamas. Read More This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. When CBC did a story on protests against Kneecap, they spoke with the Centre for Free Expression about how problematic it is to ban musical acts. That's something they only did in Feucht's case after days of broadcast and online print stories whipping up the Canadian public about the MAGA invasion. I'd never heard of Sean Feucht before this past week and CBC 's decision to join a Holy War to shut him down. They may have gotten the venues to deny him entry, but they also made him a much bigger celebrity in Canada than he would have been otherwise. CBC also showed that while they claim to stand up for Canadian values, they don't mean the ones in the Charter, they mean the left-wing political values they push every single day. blilley@ Columnists Toronto & GTA Columnists Sunshine Girls Columnists


CBC
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Ottawa Citizen
3 days ago
- Ottawa Citizen
How OC Transpo's New Ways to Bus is making commuting from the suburbs worse
Article content Buses like the 88 Hurdman are now overcrowded and only reliable during peak hours, Ledgley said. The routes should be replaced with the previous ones and OC Transpo should 'reverse this route review,' he said. Article content 'Everything has gotten worse since April 27,' he said. 'What we are hearing from these residents, mostly, is that it was fine before (OC Transpo) made the cuts.' Article content Coun. David Hill for Barrhaven-West ward says the New Ways to Bus system has 'essentially changed the concept of busing' in the city. It would be difficult to revert back to the old routes when the investment into making an efficient bus system has already been made. Article content 'We're making evolutionary progress and improvement,' Hill said. 'What we need to focus on is identifying the issues that are coming up and fixing those.' Article content Article content Hill says OC Transpo and the city need to prioritize winning transit riders' trust back when it comes to bus routes. He's introducing a motion to the city's transit committee to increase the current 90-minute transfer window to ensure riders aren't paying twice for the same trip. Article content Article content 'The challenge is that there's an additional transfer that happens locally that didn't used to happen, and that's the reason why someone could potentially be getting double charged,' he said. 'It just shouldn't be the case where somebody going from point A to point B ends up paying twice for their ride.' Article content Hill mentions mitigating factors that could delay a commuter's ride, like ongoing construction, rush hour traffic and general delays. With the New Ways to Bus system, an additional transfer occurs for Barrhaven residents locally. Article content 'The core issue we need to focus on for the New Ways to Bus system to be effective is those afternoon peak buses that are leaving Tunney's Pasture,' he said. 'If those are reliably on time and consistent, then we won't have the problem with the transfer window issues and then ultimately …it can be a better system.' Article content Article content But Ledgley says no route should take longer than 90 minutes in the first place, especially when it takes around 25 minutes to commute from the suburbs to downtown Ottawa by vehicle. Article content 'That's only solving one part of the problem,' Ledgley said. 'It's also that nobody wants to be taking two and a half hours for their commute, right?' Article content Hill says transit coming through Tunney's Pasture station could be more reliable for commuters, alongside extending the transit fare windows. Article content The transfer window becomes an issue when commuters run errands around the city and encounter unreliable bus frequencies and delays, says Nick Grover, an executive member with Free Transit Ottawa. Article content 'It's not an enjoyable experience, even before New Ways to Bus,' he said. Article content In a July 23 emailed statement, Katrina Camposarcone-Stubbs, a public information officer with OC Transpo, said that they were analyzing the 'potential impacts' of extending the transfer window in response to Hill. Article content 'This analysis will include a review of whether any routes consistently exceed 90 minutes,' she wrote. 'At this time, the scheduled duration of the majority of customer trips take place in less than 90 minutes; however, staff will be investigating travel times further.' Article content Article content Transfers also became an issue when a route was eliminated and replaced by at least two others, Grover says. Article content 'If you're going from A to B, there's more transfers involved, resulting in longer commutes and also a worse last-mile challenge,' he said, referring to bus stops that were removed and installed five or 10 minutes away. Article content With Ottawa's weather behaving in uncertain ways — like increasing heat waves, smog and thunderstorms — Grover says people are 'checking out' of the public transit system and opting to purchase personal vehicles. Article content Article content 'Or they're having to suffer through it because they have no other choice,' he said. 'For some people, that just means going out less … We're leaving people isolated and with less access to the city.' Article content Off-peak service is another essential area where OC Transpo could improve, so commuters relying on transit outside of peak hours can travel around the city more easily, Grover says. Dedicated bus lanes could also help alleviate traffic, causing the route delay, and free fare for certain demographics within Ottawa could be considered. Article content These things are necessary so that people 'so poorly treated by this transit system' may think about returning to it, he said. Article content Villeneuve-Elson, must account for the extra time they would spend on an OC Transpo bus if they left work a little later and missed an express bus back to Stittsville. Article content 'My commute home changes from being about an hour to an hour and a half to being well more than two hours,' they said. Article content Article content How did we get here? Article content Coun. Wilson Lo, representing Barrhaven East, says there were 'several layers' that got Ottawa's public transit to where it is today. As a former OC Transpo bus operator, some of the reasons he's experienced delays are as simple as 'hitting the right combination of red lights.' Article content 'It's created a lot of frustration (and) a lot of burden on our passengers,' Lo said. 'A lot of people have left transit.' Article content Discontinuing some express buses has hit residents hard, especially those relying on them during peak weekday hours. Factoring in the ' trauma of the LRT launch' and transit users reminiscing about a time when transit was efficient, Lo says the changes have been 'negative' for a lot of commuters. Article content The 'psychological barrier' of more transfers down the line has been a drawback for residents, and the promises of reliable transit have not 'panned out' as planned. Article content 'That unfortunately overshadowed a lot of the positive, good changes that have happened,' he said, referring to improved off-peak local travel in Barrhaven. Article content With the New Ways to Bus route changes, Camposarcone-Stubbs says OC Transpo understands that each commuter's journey is 'unique' and that some may be experiencing longer travel journeys, additional transfers or a longer walk to the bus stop. Article content 'Since New Ways to Bus launched, staff have been monitoring ridership levels across the network, gathering feedback from customers, and collecting observations from frontline staff,' she wrote. Article content That feedback is used to inform future adjustments to OC Transpo's bus network through service change processes, Camposarcone-Stubbs says, which take place four times a year. Article content Article content No, there are not. Article content Article content A maintenance backlog continues to impact OC Transpo's fleet, with a number of defects found during inspections. Their current fleet is set to surpass its 15-year life cycle and must be retired by April 2026. Article content In addition, they've been facing challenges in procuring e-buses due to production delays affecting deliveries to the Ottawa market. These are some of the factors outside of OC Transpo's control, Lo said: 'This is an industry-wide issue.' Article content Theoretically, if Ottawa can get the delayed vehicles right now, it would be an 'easy fix.' But there are not enough buses to return to the old network, Lo added. Article content Villeneuve-Elson says OC Transpo's buses are constantly breaking down, which leads to route cancellations or not enough buses to cover all the city's required routes, impacting people's commutes and delaying bus schedules. Article content 'It cascades through the day, kind of like a set of dominoes,' they said. Article content Article content Horizon Ottawa has been consistently advocating for free transit every year, Ledgley said: 'It should be run as a public service, not as a business.' Article content When the New Ways to Bus system first launched towards the end of April, OC Transpo offered free-fare service for the first weekend of May. At the time, then-transit service manager Renée Amilcar said it was a way to introduce the 'new OC Transpo' and encourage riders to try it out. Article content During Bluesfest's nine-day stint, OC Transpo saw ' strong ridership ' throughout the festival, with an estimated 650,000 customer trips on Line 1 and 87,000 trips on Line 2. This was the first year when Lines 2 and 4 ran alongside Line 1 during the festival. Article content Grover says these were examples of when ridership on public transit skyrocketed. Article content 'It's a great way to remove a barrier while also compensating for the fact that the service has been incredibly subpar,' he said.