GO Transit turns to Bombardier
Source:
JEFF GRAY, Globe and Mail
Published:
November 7th 2007
Printer friendly version
TORONTO — GO Transit – lambasted for delays in recent years – plans
to hire Montreal-based transportation giant Bombardier to crew most
of its trains, a move it says will improve customer service and help
its locomotives run on time.
“We're trying to seek the best value for the taxpayer and our
customers,” said Bill Jenkins, GO Transit's director of customer
service, in an interview, adding that the new contact will also make
it easier for GO to add more trains.
Under the terms of the five-year contract, Bombardier – which beat
out SNC-Lavalin and London-based Veolia Transportation – will charge
GO $23.9-million a year. GO officials say that will save them
millions of the course of deal, which goes to GO's board on Friday
for approval, but they wouldn't say precisely how much.
GO, a provincial crown agency, has blamed its long-standing problems
both on winter weather and on the complicated set of 40-year-old
arrangements it had in place that saw the country's two big railway
firms, Canadian National Railway Co. and Canadian Pacific Railway,
actually operate GO's trains.
GO Trains were plagued by labour strife last winter, after GO asked
CN to reduce the number of crew members from four to three, which
upset some workers and resulted in delays. The system also suffered
with intriguingly frequent absenteeism on Fridays in the summer,
forcing trains to be cancelled and causing delays.
While the new workers will be unionized, just like CN's, the deal
will be better structured to satisfy commuters, Mr. Jenkins said.
For example, if a train cannot run because a crew member does not
show up for work, Bombardier would have to pay a financial penalty. |