Northern Light
Superstar
I don't think it's as simple as that, because there is a second part to the equation which the TTC fails colossally on, and is IMO the far bigger part of the problem: the quality of their announcements. And this isn't an issue of old vs. new vehicles, I have been on TRs where the crew is making announcements or playing back messages from transit control and they come out utterly garbled.
I've been on my fair share of delayed trains, where no one says word one about whether we're holding for a red light, a service adjustment, a delay etc.
Yes, the hardware is an issue, no argument. But there's room for considerably better effort.
Also I'll disagree about the staff being too customer oriented. I'm not saying they should hiss at people who approach them, but there is a bell curve. Having been in many a retail store where those poor folks are forced to brown nose you on pain of being written up, I can say it is definitely not a positive experience to have multiple folks getting up in your business while you're trying to browse. I would be sufficiently pleased with being left alone unless I engage a staff member. This goes double for all the wannabe mall cops who think someone taking pictures of buses is breaking the rules.
Who was asking for any invasive behavior?
How about a smile now and again?
What about, a polite announcement similar to what the CSAs on GO do when you arrive or depart Union; "On behalf of the crew and the TTC, we thank you for riding the TTC and wish you a great day." Not at every stop; just at Bloor/Yonge and/or Union.
For comparison, when I was a child, TTC subway operators routinely left the cab door open when operating the subway. As a little boy in the rail fan seat, I got to know the names of the operators I saw on my way to school. I still remember Fred, who explained to me what all the colours of lights on his display meant, why he had to hold down the speed control, and what the signal aspects in the tunnels meant); to be clear, I'm aware cab design and rules have changed. However, I don't see that kind of outreach to enthusiastic kids or warm greetings of familiar faces.
I don't understand the mentality of operators who delay riders by departing mid-route for coffee or taking an inordinately long break in not apologizing for the delay upon their return. It would do so much to diffuse anti-operator sentiment. I don't need to know if you were under the weather or any TMI details; nor do I need an operator to read a 3-page soliloquy due to being 10s late. But if you delay me by 3 minutes or more, a simple, 'Sorry about that folks, we're back underway'. would be nice.




