Categories
The Current Situation Toronto (a.k.a. Accordion City)

TTC: Strike or No Strike?

TTC logo above “Strike or No Strike?”

If There’s to be a Strike, We’ll Hear About It Very Soon

The Amalgamated Transit Union Local 113, the union of workers for the Toronto Transit Commission, is expected to make some kind of announcement today, and the current news reports say that it’s likely they will strike. The union promised 48 hours’ notice for a strike, which means that if a strike is announced, the real traffic chaos will happen on Monday.

Some news reports for your perusal:

A Very Telling Statement About the Union

The most telling statement about the union appears in the first paragraph of this article in yesterday’s National Post:

Amalgamated Transit Union 113, which represents about 9,000 employees at the Toronto Transit Commission – 3,500 maintenance workers, about 4,500 bus, subway and streetcar drivers, plus ticket collectors and others – has invited the press to the Sheraton Hotel in Richmond Hill tomorrow for an “update” on its contract talks with TTC management. When I asked why the union negotiates, and meets the press, at a hotel not served by the TTC, a source replied, “There is lots of free parking.” What that logic tells you about both sides’ belief in public transit is a matter I will leave up to the reader.

Categories
It Happened to Me Work

Why I Took the Job Title “Nerd Wrangler”

Nerds from “Revenge of the Nerds”
Nerrrrrrrrrrrrrds!

When I accepted the position of b5media’s technical project manager, Jeremy Wright said “come up with a less-formal sounding title”. I did a little Googling and figured that I could “own” the term “Nerd Wrangler”. It’s happened — I pretty much own the first page of results for the search term “nerd wrangler”, with and without quotes.

[This was also posted on Global Nerdy.]

Categories
Uncategorized

The Problem with Open, Anonymous Comments, Illustrated


Photo courtesy of Miss Fipi Lele.

[This was also posted on Global Nerdy.]

Categories
Toronto (a.k.a. Accordion City)

Globe and Mail: Transit Talks Described as Close to Boiling Point

TTC signAccording to a Globe and Mail written by Jeff Gray, my old editor at the Queen’s Journal, things aren’t looking good in the current labour negotiations with the TTC:

Talks between the Toronto Transit Commission and its largest union are about to reach a “boiling point,” one source says, as the union – which has promised the city 48 hours notice before it walks off the job – ponders holding a news conference tomorrow.

While sources on both sides said continuing talks at a Richmond Hill hotel have been less confrontational than the last round in 2005, union and management have been largely mum since Bob Kinnear, president of Local 113 of the Amalgamated Transit Union, gathered reporters last week to list demands but commit to continuing talks until as late as today.

Mr. Kinnear, who is at the bargaining table, was not available for comment yesterday. But sources said the union was contemplating holding another news conference tomorrow to provide an update, although as of late yesterday afternoon, no decision had been made. More talks were scheduled for today.

As Torontoist puts it, “It’s this kind of thing that makes you glad to have a powerful, decisive mayor around to intervene at a moment’s notice.” Alas, the mayor’s on a trade mission to China. So continues David Miller’s descent from well-meaning Bob Rae-like leader to mega-lame-o Michael Scott-like leader.

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Uncategorized

More “Canadian Club” Ads

Here are two more “Damn Right Your Dad Drank It” Canadian Club ads in the same spirit as the ones I covered earlier (here and here). Both these posters were on the boarded-up windows of the as-yet-unpurchased former location of “The 360” on Queen Street West:

Canadian Club Poster: “Your dad had a van for a reason”

Canadian Club Poster: “You dad never tweezed anything”

Categories
It Happened to Me Toronto (a.k.a. Accordion City)

My Commute

Joey deVilla's bike

Most days, I commute to work via the Scorpion King, my trusty 2003-model Trek Calypso, a cruiser-style bicycle that provides a comfortable and “business casual” clothing-friendly ride thanks to its fat tires, comfortable seat, fenders and chainguard. The most efficient route I use is 6.3 kilometres (3.9 miles) in length and has only two hills, both of which are unchallenging, even with an accordion on my back:

My commute, as shown in Google Maps

Using this route, I can get to work in about half an hour, which is about ten minutes better than the average time it takes to make the trip via public transit. The bike commute also has these added benefits:

  • An hour’s worth of moderate exercise per day
  • Cheaper than public transit
  • Lets me see what’s happening in the neighbourhoods on the various routes I take to work
  • Less frustrating than public transit

The “less frustrating than public transit” benefit has become more relevant over the past 18 months. There appears to have been a steady decline in the service provided by the TTC over that time. During rush hour, I rarely have been on a train that didn’t have to stop and linger in the tunnel between stations for 5 minutes at least twice during a subway trip spanning a mere 10 stations. And don’t get me started on the streetcars, whose arrivals appear to be increasingly less frequent.

Last week, we had a thunderstorm and I opted to take the streetcar rather than bike. The idea of running around with a big metal object between my legs while lightning flashed overhead didn’t appeal to me and even less to the missus, who insisted I not take the bike that day. I encountered the expected delay on the train, but when it was time to switch to the Spadina streetcar, I was greeted with this line for the rear doors:

Long line to the rear entrance of the Spadina streetcar at Spadina station

…and this line for the front doors:

Long line to the front entrance of the Spadina streetcar at Spadina station

And after ten minutes of waiting — remember, this is rush hour on a streetcar line that has its own right-of-way — I opted to hop back on the subway and take an alternate route to work.

This sort of annoyance is what drives a lot of people to drive rather than take public transit. For many people, it’s not enough that it is “better” to use public transit; it feels like communism in the way that it “solves” the issue of unevenly distributed joy by evenly distributing misery to everyone. The exhortations of environmentalists, progressives and Spacing readers isn’t going to boost TTC ridership; making it less painful will.

As for me, I’m fortunate to be in a situation where cycling to work is a practical proposition. The combination of these factors:

  • I like urban cycling, having done it since grade school
  • Living within what is a reasonable cycling distance — about six kilometres — for a guy in reasonable shape
  • Living in a condo with a decent bike storage facility
  • Working in a “business casual” environment: I wear jeans and t-shirt while cycling; I change into a dress shirt and sport jacket at work (I keep a couple of blazers at the office)
  • Working in a neighbourhood with plenty of bike racks
  • Having a decent route through safe neighbourhoods that’s also relatively flat

work quite well for me.

As long as the weather’s good, I expect to be commuting by bike quite regularly.

Categories
Uncategorized

Crotch Rocket

“Crotch rocket” may be a slang term for “motorcycle”, but someone’s decided to make it a little more literal:

Motorcycle done up like a rocket
Photo courtesy of Miss Fipi Lele.