Updates from February, 2019 Toggle Comment Threads | Keyboard Shortcuts

  • Kate 16:11 on 2019-02-08 Permalink | Reply  

    Mismanagement of maintenance is being blamed for no-show buses throughout the STM. It’s not the first time I’ve seen reports of complaints about a hiring freeze on mechanics leading to too much overtime and a maintenance backlog, but the question of not refuelling buses efficiently is a new one on me. And why don’t buses have a fuel gauge?

    Update: A bus driver overheard me talking about this story just now and says that the situation is not new.

    Further thoughts: headlines are stressing that drivers are paid to do nothing. I’ve seen comments here and there sneering at drivers for this, and I’m wondering why the credulous public are being led to see it this way. If a driver shows up for her shift and has no bus to drive, it is not her fault, and sitting around the bus garage waiting is not “doing nothing” if the driver has to idle there for hours.

    The issue is not about the drivers, but about STM mismanagement of the maintenance side. Projet has promised us new buses, but it’s pointless if there aren’t the resources to keep them running.

    Further update: the mechanics’ union and the STM are engaging in mutual blame over the lagging bus maintenance.

     
    • Morgan 23:47 on 2019-02-08 Permalink

      I’m sure this will be shot down, but couldn’t the drivers who have no buses somehow be redirected to fuel them up?

      I’m a huge fan of unions, but even to me It just seems like the height of ridiculousness to have drivers sitting around twiddling their thumbs and not driving because there aren’t enough employees to put gas in the buses. (I know that wouldn’t solve the maintenance issues, but it jumped out at me)

    • Kate 04:04 on 2019-02-09 Permalink

      You’re a cook, and you show up to work, but the boss hasn’t bought any food yet and asks you to vacuum the restaurant while you wait.

      You’re a programmer and you show up to work, but the power is out so the boss asks you to empty the office wastepaper baskets while you wait.

      You’re a blue-collar worker and you show up to work, but the vehicles are all out of gas so the boss sends you to get coffee.

      Yeah, people have actual pride in what they do, and being told “it’s not your fault but, hey, since you’re here, grab this gas hose” is never going to play well.

    • mare 09:30 on 2019-02-09 Permalink

      Your analogy is a bit off, it’s more like:

      You’re a cook, and you show up to work, but the n hasn’t bought any food yet and asks you to come with him to the fish market, so you can start doing your actual job..

      You’re a programmer and you show up to work, but the power is out so the boss asks you to work on your laptop until the battery runs out, so you can start doing your actual job..

      You’re a blue-collar worker and you show up to work, but the vehicles are all out of gas so the boss asks you to get fuel, so you can start doing your actual job..

      Since the lack of gas in their busses prevents them from doing their job, it’s not completely out of left field. Unfortunately, even if the unions would allow it, is refuelling a dirty job, and they will stink of fuel afterwards.

    • steph 09:56 on 2019-02-09 Permalink

      When the city adds 5%more buses to heir fleet, they should hire 5% more bus drivers, 5% more mechanics and 5% more re-fuelers. Management is cutting corners and not hiring accordingly.

    • Chris 12:08 on 2019-02-09 Permalink

      Both Kate’s and mare’s analogies seem fine to me, as long as they are infrequent occurrences.

    • jeather 17:34 on 2019-02-09 Permalink

      They literally are being paid to wait around and do nothing. It doesn’t seem like an indictment of the drivers at all, just a statement of fact.

    • Kevin 19:34 on 2019-02-09 Permalink

      Kate
      When I was a cook I often had to clean and mop floors
      As a writer I have to empty my own recycling bin and trash can in a central location.

      Unless the STM gets gas fairies (my wife often has one, go figure) I see nothing wrong with drivers learning how to pump gas.

    • Kate 10:23 on 2019-02-10 Permalink

      Kevin, it may not be as simple as gassing up a car. I don’t know. There may be safety factors involved for which the drivers are not trained (and have no interest in being trained).

      Also, although unions are castigated for taking this kind of position, getting someone to do work outside their job description is felt to be the thin end of the wedge. If an “idle” driver can be asked to pump gas, why not get them to clean buses, for example? Where does this kind of thing end?

      I’m sure the drivers’ contract sets out the terms of their work, and it doesn’t include random requests not related to their main activity.

      The fact that the driver is idling because management won’t sort out the root of the problem (hire more mechanics, figure out why buses are breaking down so often) gets lost in the public’s anger at paying a bus driver to “do nothing.” But it’s the only fair thing to do until someone reads the riot act to STM management.

    • Joey 11:08 on 2019-02-10 Permalink

      The best thing bus drivers could do to improve their standing in the public’s eye would be to allow passengers lined up in the cold outside metro stations to board instead of idling twenty feet away until their scheduled departure time is imminent.

    • Kate 11:22 on 2019-02-10 Permalink

      Joey, an STM bus driver has been kind to me and a few coworkers lately, but I know he’s not supposed to be doing it so I won’t go into detail.

    • Uatu 11:29 on 2019-02-11 Permalink

      Like Kate said it might be more complicated than gassing up a car and if something goes wrong, then who’s responsible? @ Kevin- it doesn’t surprise me that you had to mop floors. I’m surprised the chef didn’t make you scrub pots, wash dishes bus tables too. The restaurant business is notorious for exploiting workers. It’s the easiest way they can make a profit.

  • Kate 09:02 on 2019-02-08 Permalink | Reply  

    Workers for Téo Taxi have been left high and dry without their final paycheques or layoff paperwork.

     
    • TC 23:48 on 2019-02-08 Permalink

      I hope the drivers get their money. I’ve said it before, let Montreal, or ideally the province, implement an app similar to Uber. The city or province approves the driver and the vehicle. The revenue goes to the driver, some fees for admin, maybe some toward transit needs.

    • Ephraim 11:44 on 2019-02-09 Permalink

      They will get most of their money, if not from the trustees, then from WEPP. See https://www.canada.ca/en/employment-social-development/services/wage-earner-protection/employee/benefit-amount.html

    • Kate 13:38 on 2019-02-09 Permalink

      Ephraim: eventually they may get some of what they’re owed, but that doesn’t help people living paycheque to paycheque. Téo ought to man up and pay them and give them the documentation they need to apply for pogey, now.

    • Ephraim 16:42 on 2019-02-09 Permalink

      Kate – Téo can’t pay them…. they don’t exist. I think you may need a better understanding of bankruptcy laws and what bankruptcy means. Téo ceased to exist at the very moment they declared bankruptcy and lost complete control of all finances. And even if the principals wanted to pay them out of their own pocket, they can’t, they don’t have control over the bank accounts and the first creditor is Revenue Canada/Revenu Quebec (and the principals are liable for remitting back income taxes before ANYTHING else.) So CRA/RQ would seize the money before the employees were paid. No one can be paid until the CRA/RQ are paid. Likely the first meeting is 21 days… so for 21 days there is almost no money going out.

      Even without their paperwork, they can start with IC immediately, as of the date of bankruptcy. I don’t think they even have the waiting period. The relevant information on how to lay claim in Quebec is provided by the CNESST. https://www.cnesst.gouv.qc.ca/en/Publications/Documents/NT100-152Aweb.pdf

    • Kate 11:28 on 2019-02-10 Permalink

      OK, but Téo Taxi had a parent company, Taxelco, and the same company owns Taxi Diamond which is still in operation, as far as I know. I suppose the whole point of corporations existing is to put a conceptual wall so creditors can’t get into individual owners or parent companies for their due payment?

    • Ephraim 21:31 on 2019-02-10 Permalink

      I haven’t seen the paperwork, but my guess is that Taxelco is a holding company and therefore owned shares in Téo, but didn’t actually run Téo. They may (or may not) have also been their banker. Being corporations, they are hands off of each other. An easy example might be RBI (Restaurant Brands International) which is the holding company for Tim Horton’s, Burger King and Popeye’s Louisiana Kitchen. Another bigger example might be MTY Group, which is the holding company for so many chains, it’s hard to even write a full list. And MTY owns Imvescorp, which in turn owns Pizza Delight, Bâton Rouge, Scores, Mikes, and Ben & Florentine… so a holding company to a holding company.

      In any case, there is no way for the employees to get cut a cheque. They have to apply for EI and WEPP. They may get all their pay, but it will definitely take time. Minimum is 21 days before there is even a creditor’s meeting. And Texelco will likely lose most, if not all of it’s stake in Téo.

  • Kate 08:59 on 2019-02-08 Permalink | Reply  

    This time of year always brings potholes but this winter’s fluctuations may have made them worse than usual.

     
    • Kate 08:10 on 2019-02-08 Permalink | Reply  

      One of the few positive things I’ve heard about the REM is that it doesn’t plan to build massive parking lots near its stations. Martin Patriquin writes about why this is a positive choice.

       
      • Kevin 08:28 on 2019-02-08 Permalink

        Although Montreal is promising to completely revamp the bus system in the West Island to accommodate the REM, I’ll believe it when I see it.

        After all, this is the place where people disembarking trains see the bus driver pulling away with nobody aboard.

      • Uatu 18:13 on 2019-02-08 Permalink

        If they want people to give up their cars, then make the bus service better. That means a frequent schedule on weekends, holidays, evenings. Hell, just make it 24hrs around the clock! Patriquin’s view of suburbanites is outdated. It isn’t just suv driving soccer moms. The suburbs are also the new working class neighborhoods and these people are on call, work irregular hours and have to take care of kids and aging parents which means using a car. I have co-workers here at the MUHC who had to turn down shifts because the bus and metro aren’t early enough. You want a car free society? Address everyone’s needs not just 9-5 weekday commuters.

      • Ian 12:25 on 2019-02-09 Permalink

        Between McGill and John Abbott College, there are almost 10,000 post-sec students in Sainte-Anne-de-Bellevue plus support staff an teachers, commuting from all over including off-island. There are classes from 8:30 in the morning to 10:30 at night. There’s more than just commuters going downtown and soccer moms – though you wouldn’t guess that from the case if all you look at is train and bus service.

      • Kevin 19:43 on 2019-02-09 Permalink

        Ian
        When I went to JAC it was an 8 minute drive or a 90 minute bus ride with at least one transfer.

        I don’t think the STM and REM people realize just how little service there is in the West Island

      • Kate 14:05 on 2019-02-10 Permalink

        It’s a chicken-and-egg problem. People won’t shift to public transit while the scheduling is so crap for anyone outside the 9-to-5 slot, but public transit won’t expand its services outside that slot because there isn’t any perceptible demand. I don’t know how you break this loop.

    • Kate 08:07 on 2019-02-08 Permalink | Reply  

      The last man to manage the Expos, Frank Robinson, has died at 83.

       
      • Kate 07:55 on 2019-02-08 Permalink | Reply  

        TVA’s weekend driving notes.

         
        c
        Compose new post
        j
        Next post/Next comment
        k
        Previous post/Previous comment
        r
        Reply
        e
        Edit
        o
        Show/Hide comments
        t
        Go to top
        l
        Go to login
        h
        Show/Hide help
        shift + esc
        Cancel