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April 29, 2014 at 1:53 pm in reply to: TTC enhancing accessibility with blue priority seating #18154TTC’s Priorities for the Year Ahead
Andy Byford’s speech at the Toronto Region Board of Trade
Madam President, Chair Stintz, ladies and gentlemen,
When I last spoke at the Board of Trade, my theme was “Renewing people’s faith in the TTC. In that speech, back in March of 2012, I described what I saw as my immediate priorities on assuming the role of CEO of North America’s third largest transit network. I described the impressive organization that I had inherited, talked about a number of “Quick Wins” to show customers I was serious about improvement and described the need for a top-to-bottom modernization of the TTC to show that I was serious about change.
In particular, I described 10 steps that we would take to transform our company and the service we deliver to our customers. We weren’t talking about a few tweaks here and there, we needed fundamental, sustained change, What was required was a comprehensive Corporate Plan: better management; customer led processes; and an acceptance at all levels of the company that things had to change.
But if I thought I had a big challenge then, 22 months’ experience has revealed the sheer size of the job. While we have made progress on many fronts, a huge amount remains to be done. We have enjoyed some successes and we have suffered some setbacks. We have coped with floods, ice and controversy, We launched a Customer Charter, we reorganized, brought people in, let people go, celebrated success, and, on occasions, said sorry. There has even been the odd political distraction along the way.
So where are we now, one year on?
For starters, we now have a 5 year Corporate Plan to drive our renaissance. Based around 7 strategic objectives, our plan describes how we are will modernize the TTC from top to bottom: its equipment, its processes and its culture.
Our plan is anchored around a new organisational model, one that puts the customer at the centre of everything we do. Five new business groups have been set up, each headed by a Chief Officer, accountable to me for their elements of our plan. A new role of Chief of Staff has been introduced to help me professionalise our relations with government, but also to co-ordinate activity between those five groups, finally tackling the silo mentalities that have dogged the TTC for years. A program management office has been established under that same Chief of Staff, to drive and monitor delivery of our game-changing mega projects, each of which I will touch on shortly. And we have begun down the long road of staff engagement, initially through a series of employee town halls to brief all 13,000 staff on our plan, why it matters and what we need from them.
This type of change does not happen overnight. It isn’t easy and it does not deliver immediate results. But we are laying the foundations for the new TTC, one that has a renewed self-confidence and pride, and one that can, once again be, the jewel in the crown of North American transit. Staff buy-in is essential and for that reason I have personally led over 50 of the afore-mentioned employee town halls with a similar number left to do. They can be robust, they are held all over the property and at all times of the day and yes, night. But I am convinced that, if we are to embed true change, staff at all levels need to hear about it from their CEO. They need to have the opportunity to challenge me and I get to challenge them – for all of us to up our game.
I believe we are starting to turn the corner. Under Chair Karen Stintz’ leadership, customers report that the subway is cleaner, that information is getting better and that staff seem more engaged. Our customer satisfaction scores are edging upwards, as are indices for punctuality for the majority of our modes. We are better organized with the establishment of our program office, with the introduction of challenge meetings to hold managers to account and with closer, more integrated inter-working with colleagues at the city.
On the subway, our stations are now overseen by 6 high quality Group Station Managers, professionals chosen to excel at people management and to spread a passion for customer service. Our 2013 Customer Charter delivered on all but one target in its inaugural year, representing time-bound promises kept that improved the service that we offer. We have begun, and sustained, an all-out focus on what I call the “basics”, mundane activities that must be got right if service is to improve. This ranges from comprehensive event planning and better management of disruption through to an obsession about the minutiae of running the service where every second counts and where root causes of delay are relentlessly eliminated.
This is all good stuff but I am under no illusions whatsoever that we are still nowhere near good enough. Consistency of our service is still patchy, delays are far too frequent and our capability both in terms of equipment and people performance has a long way to go.
The last few days have starkly demonstrated the fragility of our existing network as we have struggled to keep 30 year old streetcars going in arctic temperatures. Furthermore, our signalling, stretches of track, communications equipment and the SRT are, quite simply, worn out.
So, for a number of reasons, 2014 is a very big year for the TTC. We are faced with three defining moments that will determine our future. Will we continue to progress or will our renaissance stall before it has really begun?
The first of these moments is happening right now. The TTC is in the final stages of successfully securing an increase in its budgets, funding that is critical to delivery of our Corporate Plan. For two years, we have accepted and lived with a freeze in our operating subsidy. With ever-rising customer numbers, this isn’t a freeze, it’s a cut in subsidy in real terms. We have done our bit, we have tightened our belt and we have driven down costs in our organization to reflect these tough times.
But, with customer numbers forecast to rise another 2.3% this year, up to a record 540 million rides, we simply must add service and that means more cost and more subsidy. Every additional ride we carry costs the TTC a dollar, the difference between the cost of a ride and the average fare that it generates. While we have managed to live within our subsidy for the past two years, the cost of additional operators, vehicle maintenance and fuel simply cannot be absorbed by an organization that is already remarkably efficient by international standards.
Don’t take my word for that. According to Imperial College London, because TTC is one of only two subways outside of Asia and South America that covers its own operating costs, and due to its exceptionally high labour productivity and high level of service capacity and frequency throughout the day, “when compared with other metros in the world, Toronto’s Subway offers excellent value for money”. That’s an actual quote.
The TTC has the lowest operating subsidy of any major transit system in North America and, for that matter, any I can think of in Western Europe. At a mere 79 cents per rider, the TTC runs service 24 hours a day. Contrast that with Montreal ($1.16/rider), Chicago ($1.68/rider), Boston ($1.93/rider), and Los Angeles ($2.53/rider). Even the massive New York City transit needs $1.03/rider. If you need further convincing of the TTC’s efforts to be frugal, consider that in 2010, the TTC carried around 462 million rides for an operating subsidy of $430m. Four years later, we will carry 80 million more rides for a subsidy lower than that awarded in 2010. From a longer term perspective, over the past two decades, the TTC has seen a substantial improvement in labour productivity as evidenced by the fact that workforce has only increased by 18% while service levels have increased about 27% in order to carry an additional 32% in riders.
We are not out of the woods, though. Even with a modest increase in subsidy, we have had no choice but to ask hard-pressed, loyal TTC riders for an inflationary fare increase, something that is hard to justify when service is more crowded than ever and a policy that strikes me as counter-intuitive when we are trying to win back our reputation. The harsh reality is that I have pushed the city as far as I can and the remaining gap in our budget to provide additional service has to be closed.
On the capital side, the picture is somewhat bleak. The TTC needs $9b over the next ten years to fund its state of good repair and to meet a provincial legislative requirement to make the TTC network fully accessible by 2025. We are currently short on that figure by $2.3b, none of which is for “nice to have projects”. All relate to the TTC’s state of good repair backlog – which must be addressed – and critical expansion projects.
So we are forming a task force to go to Ottawa and Queen’s Park to make the case for the TTC and for Toronto, a task force made up of the city, the TTC and, I propose, actual TTC customers. In an election year, both municipally and provincially, the time is right for us to make our case.
We are, of course grateful for the contributions that the province and Ottawa already make with some capital projects and gas tax. But a successful Toronto enabled by a modernized TTC is good for Ontario and, ultimately, Canada. The city cannot continue to bear the burden of operating the TTC alone, and we cannot keep asking our customers to pay more and more. Something has to give.
The second defining moment for the TTC comes in the spring when we meet with our unions to agree a new contract to take us through the next few years. It would be wrong of me to comment on this, as discussion should only happen around the negotiating table. But I see this contract as a watershed for the TTC and its staff. Do we grasp the nettle of new technology? Do we embrace new customer-led processes, roles and mind sets? Or do we continue to do things the way we’ve always done them?
To me, maintaining the status quo is not an option.
A lot of this change involves the mega projects to which I referred earlier. It is these programs that will truly see the TTC transformed and this is the year that change will begin to become apparent. We have already begun the painstaking task of upgrading our 60 year old signaling system, an upgrade that will see the introduction of automatic train control throughout the extended Yonge-University –Spadina line by 2018, with the Bloor-Danforth line to follow. The roll-out of our smartcard system, Presto, gets under way in earnest this year, and is itself coupled to more tangible evidence of modernization as it coincides with delivery of our new streetcar fleet, the first vehicle of which will appear on the 510 Spadina route at the end of August. High capacity, articulated buses are now being deployed on our busiest routes, while the YUS line will become fully operated by Rocket trains. Meanwhile, we have completed tunneling on the Spadina line extension to Vaughan and remain on target for opening in late 2016. Sooner than that, later this year in fact, we will unveil a second platform at Union, part of the transformation of our major transit hub and one that will showcase Toronto.
Introduction of new streetcars and articulated buses will prompt more change. For decades, TTC customers have rightly complained about vehicle bunching and short-turning, two operational problems that must be cracked. Our budget submission contains provision to bring back roadside supervisors to actively manage routes prone to bunching. As new streetcars arrive, the routes to which they are deployed will convert to proof of payment, all door boarding. This is good news for customers with faster boarding and alighting, but the risk of fare evasion becomes a greater risk. So we will also recruit revenue teams to board vehicles at random, part of a big push to stem the loss of revenue caused by those who cheat the system at the expense of their fellow riders and taxpayers.
And we will launch a new Customer Charter later this month, with another 30 or so time-bound customer service improvements, pay-back in part for the extra fares we are asking customers to pay.
In addition to all these game-changers comes something more intangible but arguably, the most important project of all; we are committed to changing the underlying culture of the TTC. For too long, staff have complained of being treated like a number by their managers, of being considered guilty unless proven innocent. Discipline -even the word sounds antiquated – has been liberally, yet ineffectively applied. Worst of all, the efforts of the overwhelming good have often gone unacknowledged while the errant few have remained unchallenged. In tackling management culture first, we are looking to transform morale and, ultimately, people performance at the TTC so that this becomes the place everyone aspires to work and where customers feel universally valued. I am asking everyone at the TTC to up their game and such change has to be personified at the top, hence my personal attendance at a grueling but rewarding series of town halls.
There is a massive prize at stake here. The result will be a rejuvenated TTC that delivers our vision and that actively cherishes, develops and supports excellent staff.
The risk is, that there is so much to do and so many critical dependencies, that it is a real challenge to pull it all together. We have also raised stakeholder and customer expectations and I worry that people don’t understand that our transformation will take time.
The third and final defining moment also falls this year, and, unlike the other two, it is one that is completely outside our control.
The municipal and, possibly provincial election, will have a major impact on our future direction depending on candidate and party views on the importance of adequate funding for transit.
Will the new Mayor and City Council and potentially, provincial government, be pro-transit and support us in delivery of our plan? Or will a view prevail that we’re getting by today so why can’t we continue like this for a few more years?
I don’t have a vote, but I know where I stand. We need visionaries in key office that recognize the need for long-term sustained, predictable funding so that transit can be improved and modernized so that we may expand our network to meet current and future needs. We need our political leaders to understand the value of transit, as well as its cost, and to recognize that, for Toronto to be truly world class, we need to have an infrastructure to match.
Toronto Regional Board of Trade understands this and its election campaign reinforces that point.
I know that these are tough times but what could be more important than tackling congestion, thereby maintaining our competitive edge, our quality of life and the economic resurgence of our city in recent years?
Adding service to crowded routes is crucial to ensuring that the TTC meets its goals of providing attractive and reliable service. Adding more trains, streetcars and buses to routes reduces the time scheduled between vehicles, thus shortening waiting times for customers, and speeding up their trip. Crowding levels on board the vehicles are reduced, and this provides a more comfortable and attractive environment for customers. The reliability of the service is improved, as the higher capacity allows the route to operate more robustly, limiting the need for those dreaded short turns! Yes, this costs money, but isn’t it a good thing to get people onto transit and to free up space for those that want or need to use their cars?
Longer term, we need to continue to fund the TTC and its transit partners to expand our network to meet demand. It’s great that the TYSSE is being built and that further expansion is under way with my friend Bruce McCuaig and our colleagues at Metrolinx. Regardless of the revenue tools, and I am largely agnostic about these, we must keep investing to maintain and grow the TTC and to better integrate GTHA systems.
This, then, will indeed be a a big year for the TTC. The budget settlement, our contract negotiations and the future political environment will define our future.
I’m clear on what I need to do.
My role is to advocate for my customers. So yes, I am calling for sustainable funding and a fair deal for riders, yes, I am looking to add service and yes, I maintain that we urgently need to settle on, and build, critical projects like a relief line and higher order transit on the East Bayfront. As such, I make no apology for being a squeaky wheel until transit riders get a fairer deal.
My role is to also stick up for the TTC and its staff, the vast majority of whom do a fantastic job, day in, day out.
Give us the political and financial support, and we will deliver a 5 year plan that will transform the transit experience in this city.
In this big year for the TTC, we will continue to improve customer service, we will continue to respect taxpayers’ dollars and we will strive ever harder to deliver a transit system that makes Toronto proud. You can hold me fully accountable for that.
Thank you.
DramaWay’s Annual Multi-Arts Open Class Showcase 2014: We Go Together!
Thursday, May 29, 2014
DramaWay’s DramaWorks West group presents their production of Grease, featuring Pop & Rock Tunes, a musical performance by The Singing Works Vocal Group. Marking the 50th anniversary of the Beatles coming to America, this celebration of pop and rock pays tribute to beloved artists from the past right on through to current pop sensations!
Location: Swansea Town Hall Community Centre, 95 Lavinia Road, Toronto.
The show begins at 5:00p.m., in Council Chambers RoomSaturday, June 14, 2014
Three DramaWorks groups take the stage to showcase their uniquely adapted Grease productions. Ruins, a high-energy, eclectic array of choreographies, will be performed by DramaWay’s Rhythm Works dance troupes between the first and second shows.Location: Papermill Theatre, 67 Pottery Road, Toronto.
Showtimes
Grease Show #1: Scarborough DramaWorks Group: Noon–1:30 p.m.
Ruins: RhythmWorks Dance Troupes:2-2:45p.m.
Grease Show #2: DramaWorks Group B: 3:45–5:15p.m.
Grease Show #3: DramaWorks Group A: 6:30–8:00p.m.Tickets: Grease tickets are $15 each. Tickets for Ruins are $10each.
All tickets are available at the door (cash only),or online at http://www.dramaway.comEvening Camp 2014
DramaWay Multi Arts Enrichment Camp is an innovative summer program offering youth and adults with special needs of ALL abilities an eclectic exposure to varied means of creative expression. The integration of drama, music, dance and art as well as life skills training enrich campers as they embark on a fun-filled summer adventure!
DANCE
Campers will enjoy movin’ and shakin’ to a sampler of dance throughout the ages.
Dance Workshop Highlights:
■Jazz
■Hip Hop
■Modern Dance
■Creative MovementDRAMA
Students will have fun exploring a wide range of active drama games and acting techniques. They will also receive an overview of the basic elements of theatre while also working towards an Open Class Presentation on the last day of camp.
Drama Workshop Highlights:
■Physical Theatre
■Shakespeare
■Life Skills through Drama – Social Skills Training
■Character Development
■Working with minimal scripts/ImprovisationART
Participants will be engaged in an introductory experience to an assortment of hands-on visual art activities. They will have a blast creating and designing their own masterpieces.
Art Workshop Highlights:
■Drawing and painting
■Sculpting
■Crafty Arts
■Multi-mediaMulti Arts Enrichment Camp
SUMMER 2014 SUMMER NIGHTS EVENING PROGRAMS
This program geared and modified for youth and adults with special needs of ALL abilities is an extension of our year round evening programming. This year the program will be held at a TTC accessible location, Summerhill & Yonge; Community Living Toronto @ 30 Birch Avenue. Tuesday Night ShakespeareWorks Camp exposes participants to the world of theatre and dance inspired by the work of Shakespeare. The group will work towards showcasing a small piece on the final camp date for family and friends. This program runs on Tuesday evenings for eight weeks. MultiArtWorks Evening Camp spans the realm of fine arts while engaging participants in the three disciplines of drama, dance and visual arts. A small open class showcase is planned to take place on the final camp date for family and friends. This program will run for eight weeks at two evenings:
■ShakespeareWorks: Tuesday Evenings; 30 Birch Avenue
■MultiArtWorks Option 1: Wednesday Evening Multi Arts Camp; 30 Birch Avenue
■MultiArtWorks Option 2: Thursday Evening Multi Arts Camp; 30 Birch AvenueOften campers are given the chance to meet with guest specialists in the arts when available.
With a camper to staff ratio of 5:1, our programs are tailored to the individual strengths and abilities of each camper. Every aspect of our programming is designed to be process oriented and campers enjoy our non-competitive atmosphere. We make every effort to build communication skills and to further the development of social skills while also enhancing self-esteem. Register for all three evening programs and save $100 or register for two evenings and save $62. Campers also have the option of simply enrolling for just one evening camp if preferred.
ShakespeareWorks Camp
MultiArtWorks Camp
Dates
Tuesday Nights
July 1, 8, 15, 22, 29, August 5, 12, & 19Wednesday Evenings
July 2, 9, 16, 23, 30, August 6, 13, & 20Thursday Evenings
July 3, 10, 17, 24, 31 August 7, 14, 21Time
6:30-8:30 p.m.
Cost
One evening program is only $281 (+HST)
Two evening programs for just $498 (+HST) Savings of over $60!
Biggest discount is for all three evening programs at $743(+HST)!DramaWorks
Our highly successful DramaWorks (special needs ages 14+) program is back for another year! Created and facilitated by DramaWay’s founder, Danielle Strnad, DramaWorks offers a unique year-long creative experience. An engaging drama environment allows participants to expand their life skills and self-awareness through the use of drama games, while working towards a final production. The thrill of the stage keeps participants returning, year after year. DRAMAWORKS – DOWNTOWN AGE GROUPS
14+TIME
Group A: Tuesdays 5:00 – 6:30 pm
Group B: Tuesdays 6:45 – 8:15 pmLOCATION
Downtown – Community Living Toronto
30 Birch Avenue
Click here for mapDATES
Fall Term: Tuesdays, September 24th – November 26th, 2013
Winter Term: Tuesdays, January 21st – March 4th, 2014
March Break: No Classes March 11th & 18th, 2014 (2 week break)
Spring Term: Tuesday, March 25th – June 3rd, 2014• Dress Rehearsal is scheduled to take place offsite on Tuesday, June 10th, 2014
• Multi Arts Open Class Showcase is scheduled to take place offsite on Saturday, June 14th, 2014RhythmWorks-East DramaWay’s RhythmWorks (Ages 14+) is a great place to put on your dancing shoes and have some fun! Participants will develop their movement, musicality, and performance skills by learning original choreographed routines. This exciting program culminates in an end-of-year presentation where participants show off their skills for family and friends!
*Please note: Participants must bring a clean pair of running shoes (or dance shoes) other than their street shoes to wear & wear light comfortable clothing that is easy to move in (or bring some to change into for the class). All dancers are encouraged to wear short-sleeved shirts, deodorant and bring a bottle of water. Those with long hair must tie it back. AGE GROUPS: 14+ TIME: Thursdays, 7:30 – 8:30 pm
LOCATION: East End – Community Living Scarborough – Gym
1712 Ellesmere Road Click here for map DATES: Fall Term – Thursdays, September 26th – November 28th, 2013
Winter Term: Thursdays, January 16th- March 6th, 2014
March Break: No Classes March 13th or March 20th, 2014 (2 week break)
Spring Term: Thursdays, March 27th – June 5th, 2014
Break: No class on June 12th, 2014
• Dress Rehearsal scheduled to take place offsite on Wednesday June 11th, 2014
• Multi Arts Showcase is scheduled to take place offsite on Saturday, June 14th, 2014http://www.dramaway.com check out singing works/Rhythmworks-Dance and Dramaworks Groups B and A downtown Dramaway is also looking for particpaints to full up spaces in our Dance and Drama programs. So come out and join us we also have productions every year in June. It’s excllent.
I am repersiting Rhythmworks Dance programs and Group B Programs because because I am in these two Dramaway Programs.Can a Young Adult who has a Disabilty who really wants a Cell-Phone Plan are they elgiaible to buy their own? Without Support
March 11, 2014 at 2:19 pm in reply to: Can Young Adults who have a disabilty legally get married? #18116How long does the process take to legally change my name?
Where the marriage is registered and the name change applications are complete and accurate, the service delivery time is six to eight weeks.
This time does not include processing time to change your government issued documents.
March 11, 2014 at 2:13 pm in reply to: Can Young Adults who have a disabilty legally get married? #18115How do I apply for a legal name change?
You can download the Application to Change an Adult’s Name, fill it out, then mail in the completed form and required documents to ServiceOntario at:
Office of the Registrar General
PO Box 3000
189 Red River Rd, 3rd Flr
Thunder Bay, ON P7B 5W0If you are unable to download the form, you can request to have the form mailed to you. Please contact ServiceOntario at 1-800-461-2156 or 416-325-8305.
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Hello Laura I will love to attend
On December 9, 2013, in the morning I was getting ready to facilitate and helping out with Mia Mc Gowan the game which we play with young children and youth into different schools.
We played Spinclusion in the Exess School at Spadina with the grade six,fives three and two. I find it challenging to arrange the transportation getting into different schools getting there and trying to make our schedules. I also find it challenging with the Pre-Teens and Youth because they are in their classrooms all day they can also feel lazy and tired at the end of the day when school is finished so they can hang out with their friends and also go home right after school. Mia and I were in a classroom with musical instruments so there is a music educator. We play The Youth Version with the Pre-Teens in the class. The last class we played Spinclusion with the younger children. So we asked simple questions for the younger kids. I also noticed there is a student who has a disability in the classroom who is in grade two and she has a teaching assistant so she helps her with her homework and schoolwork. The Younger children are always get really excited when I turn the Spinclusion Board and when I also give pencils at the end of the session and spinning the bored they cheer their friends on.March 4, 2014 at 10:54 am in reply to: Looking for Living Arrangement for Young Mother in Wheelchair (51 and so fun!) #18109Everyone wants to feel a sense of belonging and acceptance in their community. Living in your own home; choosing where and with whom you live, and forming social relationships are fundamental to being part of society do you agree?
Jenna’s story
I was born and raised in Toronto, live with my Mom and Gary and have lived in the same house for over 20 years. I’m 22 years old and an only child. I sometimes wished that I had a sister to spend time with and do things with. Like many people, I wish for a lot of different things. For example, I wish that I had a boyfriend, I’d like to travel and I’d really like to move into the basement apartment of Mom and Gary’s house.I think it is very important for adults with disabilities and their own parents to think about their future and not to be afraid of moving out of their house-it’s a natural step when people grow up. I heard about LIGHTS and contacted them on my own. Later I told my Mom about it and she was surprised to hear that I wanted to one day, move out. Mom and Gary are supportive and want to help me achieve my dream. I want other people to learn about what is involved with LIGHTS and what it really means for us to move out of our parent’s house someday. That way we can teach our parents how smart we can be and how we can be successful doing things independently and get support when we need it.
I called LIGHTS because I need help to plan and find a room mate. I think my first step is going to be to live in the basement apartment of our house and I still need to find a room mate that I get along with who would like to do things together.
I would recommend that you contact LIGHTS for support if you are thinking about your future or your family member’s future because it’s never too early to start thinking about the future.
March 4, 2014 at 10:50 am in reply to: Looking for Living Arrangement for Young Mother in Wheelchair (51 and so fun!) #18108Hello Laura I can help Initial Consultation form This form is used to collect some initial contact information about the individual and their family. It also asks about the type of assistance the individual and family would like from LIGHTS Click here to download. Downloadable Forms
The following forms are designed to assist individuals and families through the LIGHTS journey. They will help the Facilitator understand what support individuals and families are looking for and then provide support that will bring them one step closer to their family member’s dream! Send the completed form to the LIGHTS Facilitator at LIGHTS@cltoronto.ca or fax to 416 968 7320. You can also check out the Lights website http://www.lights.to I am also involed in the lights program it’s very great for people who has a disabilty. And I think the Lights Program will be very helpful and supportive to yourself and your family to consider. I just wanted to pass this information to you for you to consider and think about for your mother. Think about it
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