Howdy,
Ms. Cindy!
Billy
Bob here in St. Catharines. Sorry to be
pesterin’ you again so soon. After I
sent off my last message, Daisy May, turned to me and asked, “Did you tell Ms.
Cindy about the fallin’ ice at Union Station?”
“Oops”,
I mumbled, “I’ll get right on that.”
After
Daisy May rolled into the Union Station on the bus from Newmarket, she had some
time to kill before catchin’ the LSW train, so she figured she’d say a quick
hello to that nice CSA Katelyn that I.K. told us
about
— so as to lend her some moral support.
Daisy
May made her way up to Platform 10 and was waitin’ under a temporary roof near
the accessibility platform, when she heard this loud crash of ice hittin’ the
platform. It happened again a couple of
minutes later on Platform 9. Ice was
meltin’ and fallin’ from them louvered windows on that new-fangled glass train
shed thing.
A
Customer Assistance person wearin’ a bright coloured vest and a hard hat showed
up on Platform 9 to warn passengers about the problem and for anyone on
Platforms 10 and 11 to walk through the Barrie train parked to the south to
avoid the ice hazard. Daisy May had to
shake her head at how self-absorbed passengers is at the end of their work
day. The Customer Assistance person had
a real clear and loud voice, but folks just kept ploddin’ along in la la land.
Daisy
May said a real handsome gentleman (she used them words a number of times) saw
that the Customer Assistance person weren’t gettin’ much attention, so he stood
outside the door of the accessibility coach of the Barrie train, informed
passengers of the problem by pointin’ at the ice above, and recommended they
detour through the train. Daisy May says
she likes a man who takes charge, and she wanted to thank him for what he done.
Well,
the Georgetown train pulled in on the track north of the Barrie train about
then, and when the doors opened, Mr. Handsome popped into them and was
gone. Daisy May looked for a female CSA
who might be Katelyn in the accessibility coach, but there was a male CSA on
duty that day — double disappointment for Daisy May.
When
Daisy May got home and told me all this, I got to wonderin’ whether anyone got
hurt cuz of the fallin’ ice. A news story that day reported a young man
in Ottawa was killed by fallin’ ice. I
checked Google News for stories about GO Transit’s new train shed, but all I
done found was that feedin’ frenzy the media folks had about electric trains not
fittin’ into Union Station sometime in the future.
Not sure why them same journalists never took an interest in my missus
and y’all maybe gettin’ hurt due to yet another safety hazard there.
I got
to thinkin’ maybe someone posted somethin’ to Twitter about this mess, and yep,
someone did. Now @GOtransit’s response to @GOvoygr was OK
— they had to get their Customer Assistance folks to track level pronto to
manage the situation — but why didn’t they broadcast an alert on Twitter
warnin’ everyone about the problem?
Earlier in the afternoon they tweeted about how snow and rain make a
dangerous couple. Heck, me and Herb (you remember my
cousin Herb Hellfinger) use our CB radios lots of times to warn others about
road hazards, like black ice.
Daisy May
asked me, “Who in Canada would design a transit roof that sends ice crashin’
down on passengers below?” Well, in this
case it’s Zeidler Partnership Architects.
When I told her they won a
architectural award in 2012 for their design, Daisy May said … Well, I better not repeat what she said, but
it kind of went along the lines of if someone gets hurt, the only award that’s
appropriate is the Canadian equivalent of the Carbuncle Cup.
Here’s
hopin’ you stay safe while boardin’ them trains, Ms. Cindy. Daisy May says if you don’t already own one,
Discount Safety Gear has hard hats on sale.
Best
wishes,
Billy
Bob
3 comments:
I don't know about ice, but a couple of years ago I was hit in the shoulder by a piece of concrete that broke off of that crumbling structure. Thankfully it was just a small piece.
Once the new shed roof gets installed beginning this summer then that hazard will take care of itself.
I heard a crash this morning near the CBC building that sounded like an avalanche. The amount of ice and snow falling off the convention center roof onto Front Street was astounding. Whoever thought of putting in a slanted glass overhang that is directly over the sidewalk should be swatted a few times.
Typical "contractor" industry standards: Use inexperienced hired hands, the least expensive materials, the simplest most basic conceptual designs, meet the minimum standards, make the quotas ...
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