Special
to This Crazy Train
By
Ian Cognito
Search
tripadvisor.ca for Route 12, and you’ll find articles like Scenic Byway Route 12 in
Utah. Today, we’re not looking at that
stretch of highway. Instead, we’re
providing a traveller’s perspective of GO Transit’s Route 12 between Niagara
Falls and Burlington.
I’ll
refer you first to a couple of excellent articles by Shaun Cleaver regarding
inter-city bus travel in the Hamilton—Niagara region of the Golden Horseshoe:
2.
There is no central
transit terminal around Hamilton and that is a problem (The
headline photo looks familiar.)
Take
note of the awesome “spaghetti & meatballs” map in the second article.
1. Reading the
Timetable
If
you’re looking for a timetable posted at Route 12 bus stops, give up — there
are none. GO Transit removed them years
ago and now expects us to carry electronic devices with a data plan. Alternatively, you can download the schedule
as a PDF from the GO Transit website. If you must have a printed timetable, your
bus driver might carry a supply (but don’t count on it), or pick up a copy if
you’re at Union station.
One
anomaly that GO Transit continues to inflict upon the public is their use of “EASTBOUND
/ EN DIRECTION EST” and “WESTBOUND / EN DIRECTION OUEST” in the timetable. These are NOT compass directions! Metrolinx
views Union Station as the centre of its universe, and trains on the Lakeshore
West (LSW) line run eastbound into Union and westbound out of Union. Route 12 is viewed as an extension of the LSW
line, so it follows that this bus route should inherit its directionality from
the trains. I’m not buying into that
logic.
I’ve
taken some liberties and updated the map that’s in the timetable PDF to
illustrate the conundrum.
The
problem can be put to rest quite easily.
Route 12 operates on the QEW, which has NO cardinal
directions posted.
Leaving Toronto, signage along the highway is QEW/Hamilton, QEW/Niagara,
or QEW/Fort Erie; in the reverse direction, it’s QEW/Toronto. Given that they fall under the purview of the
MTO, why doesn’t GO Transit follow suit?
Some
minor notes regarding route numbers in the timetable and displayed by the buses:
·
12 is the all stops trip between Niagara Falls
and Burlington — both directions (◄►)
·
12A is the Grimsby to Burlington trip first
thing on weekday mornings. It does not
operate outbound from Burlington.
·
12B is the express trip between Niagara Falls
and Burlington (◄►)
·
12C is the all stops trip between St.
Catharines and Burlington (◄►)
·
As of this writing, the 12D express trip
between St. Catharines and Burlington (◄►) no longer operates.
2. Buying Your Ticket
If
you’re doing any more than a one off day trip, endear yourself to your bus
drivers, and get a PRESTO card. If you
must buy a paper ticket, do so at a GO station or the Niagara Falls bus
terminal. For other stops along the
route, you’ll need to buy your ticket from a driver — unless ticket vending
machines have sprouted along the way recently.
And remember, buses are not equipped to accept credit and debit cards;
it’s cash only, and your $50 bills might
not be accepted.
Do
your homework in advance and know where you’re GOing and how you are getting
there. Use the Plan Your Trip feature on GO Transit’s website, e.g.:
|
Other
trips will be suggested, but this is the one that gets you closest to the
Falls in the shortest time.
N.B.
Your GO Transit driver is not your
tour guide! Know what you want to
visit and what local transportation you’ll need before you embark on your
trip. You’d be amazed at how many
folks roll into town and ask, “Now what?”
|
Note,
too, that a bus driver can issue a ticket to a nonexistent stop on the route,
e.g. Stoney Creek to St. Catharines GO station instead of Fairview Mall…
This
has happened when the station lookup method is used; using the zone lookup
issued the correct ticket. Know your
zones…
Once
you are in possession of your ticket, don’t lose it. Keep it on your person as proof of payment,
especially if you absolutely have to exit the bus at a stop to light a
cigarette, take three drags, discard the still lit cigarette by flicking it in
front of someone’s face, and then attempt to board the bus again. This incident actually happened. The self-entitled passenger wasted a
significant amount of time arguing their case with the driver that they had
left their ticket upstairs, and then had to retrieve it.
3. Which Bus Do I
Board?
After
deciphering the timetable and knowing where you need to be and at what time,
you’d think boarding the bus would be a snap.
Wrongo! Frequently, Niagara bound
buses and Burlington bound buses arrive at the same stop simultaneously or
within minutes of one another. The St. Catharines stop is
notoriously busy on a Friday afternoon, with a mix of local and GO buses pulling
up to the platform. Don’t let St.
Catharines Transit Route 12 buses (Vine St. northbound AND southbound) confuse you — ignore them!
I
recall being on a Niagara bound bus when a young lady waltzed on, tapped her
PRESTO card, and took her seat in the upper saloon. We had no sooner pulled away from the stop
and turned the corner by Home Depot, when she descended the stairs in a flurry,
rushed up to the driver, proclaimed she was on the wrong bus, tapped off, and
rushed back to the bus stop to board the Burlington bound bus. Drivers sensitive to perplexed passengers
will announce via the external loudspeaker (if it’s working) the intended
destination of the bus as it rolls up to the bus platform. Pay attention!
So,
how does the neophyte GO passenger identify their vehicle? Just read the lighted signage on the outside
of the bus. It’s as easy as A, B,
C.
A.
This is the route number from the timetable.
B.
This is the final destination for the trip.
C.
This is a scrolling list of stops on the
trip. GO Transit could improve this part
of the signage to show only current and remaining stops on the trip, i.e. do
not show stops already serviced.
In
this example, the bus is Burlington bound, making all stops, with the final
destination being the Park and Ride stop at Dundas St. @ Hwy 407.
There
is also signage on the side of the bus to the left of the door, which displays
information segments A and B only. The
following image is from a bus making the same trip as the one above. In this case, the abbreviation CRPL (car
pool) is used instead of P+R —more inconsistencies are addressed below. Sometimes a strip of “something” obscures the
side signage and maintenance crews take an eternity to fix the problem.
All
of this assumes your bus actually shows up.
Buses can be late for any number of reasons; see section 7 below. There are times your bus is a no-show — the
reasons are varied. The bus may have experienced
an equipment failure, or the driver may have slept in, or the Slip Office
(personnel management) may have messed up, or there
may have been a passenger with suspected ISIS affiliations onboard…
4. How Do I Know When
I’m at My Destination?
This
bears emphasis… Know where you’re GOing and stay vigilant to where you are en route! Even though buses are equipped with interior
monitors that display upcoming stops, which automated announcements are
designed to call out, the technology can let you down. How? The recorded announcement
can be garbled. The
interior and exterior speakers may have been wired in reverse, or the PA system
is inoperable, in which case the driver may need to bellow out the stop.
Experienced
drivers will make their own announcement for the approaching stop, because they
know what the bus technology tells you is NOT
NECESSARILY what’s printed on your ticket.
5. Passenger Charter promise:
Clear and consistent communications
If
there is one thing GO Transit excels at it is turbidness and inconsistency. There are three stops that are not listed in
the Route 12 timetable, and they are all called Fairview St. @ Maple Ave.
Here they are on Google Maps…
You
don’t learn of this anomaly until after you’ve boarded the bus. Travelling Niagara Falls to Burlington P+R,
the interior monitors display the following (reading bottom to top):
If
anyone can clarify why there are two stops 190 m. apart on the south side of
Fairview St., please enlighten us in the comments. Note that the stop on the NE corner of the
intersection by the Petro-Canada station is not listed as a designated stop
after the bus leaves Burlington station on its way to the carpool lot. Travelling the reverse direction, the
monitors display the following (reading bottom to top):
Note
that the aforementioned stops on the south side of Fairview St. are not listed
as designated stops after the bus leaves the carpool lot on its way to Burlington
station. Buses have been known to drive
past intending Niagara bound passengers who have tried to flag down said
buses. Hmmm… that sounds vaguely
familiar.
Other
inconsistencies include the following:
·
The timetable specifies Dundas St. @ Hwy. 407, whereas (i) the interior monitor refers to
the stop as Northampton Blvd. @ Dundas
St. GO Carpool Lot, (ii) the front exterior signage specifies BURLINGTON P+R, and (iii) the exterior
side signage says BURLINGTON CRPL.
·
The timetable specifies Casablanca Blvd. @ QEW, whereas (i) the interior monitor refers to
the stop as South Service Rd. @
Casablanca Blvd. GO Park & Ride, and (ii) the front exterior signage
specifies GRIMSBY P+R.
·
The timetable specifies Stanley Ave. @ Hwy. 420, whereas (i) the interior monitor refers to
the stop as Stamford St. @ Stanley Ave.
GO Park & Ride, and (ii) the front exterior signage specifies NIAGARA FALLS.
·
Zone 82 is Beamsville
per the timetable, Lincoln per
By-Law #2A, and generally defined as Ontario
St. @ QEW. How many QEW exit signs
list Ontario Street? Three — in Grimsby,
Beamsville, and St. Catharines.
6. Remember what your
mom told you before those long car trips…
When
heading to the bus terminal in Niagara Falls, there is no good reason to stop
at the 7-Eleven on Victoria St. for a jumbo Slurpee; the same goes for your Tim
Hortons large double-double. Why? Because GO buses are not equipped with a
washroom. This point cannot be stressed enough — take care of your business before you board.
If
you’re transferring to a train at Burlington, that station is your first
opportunity for a washroom break. If
your ultimate destination is Pearson International Airport, you’ll no doubt be
transferring to the Route 47 bus at the Burlington P+R stop. For the longest time, the washroom at that
location was behind the following stand of sumac:
More
brazen passengers would sneak behind the GO supervisor’s vehicle and…
GO
Transit Station Ops realized they needed a solution to the problem, so they
delivered it…
(A
photo of the interior is available upon request, but you’ll be sorry you asked
for it.)
So,
after leaving Niagara Falls some 2+ hours before, this is what you have to look
forward to for relief. Consider it, too,
from a driver’s perspective. This is
their layover spot before the trip back to The Falls — day after day. Who would want have a sit during those -20°C
days of winter? Is this the type of loo
the brass at Metrolinx use? If it’s not
good enough for them, why would passengers and front line staff think it’s
acceptable?
7. Are we there yet?
Even
though you may not be travelling the full length of Route 12, it may still take
a long time to arrive at your destination.
There are several reasons for this.
There may be a serious accident or a vegetable spill ahead…
On
June 25, 2018, GO Transit issued the following alerts for Route 12:
●
18:30 As a result of a collision on the Skyway Bridge, buses on your route are
delayed up to 40 minutes.
●
19:15 As a result of a collision on the Skyway Bridge, buses on your route are
experiencing delays of up to 75 minutes.
●
22:54 We are experiencing delays between 45-60 minutes as a result of multiple
collisions at QEW between Centennial Parkway and Fruitland. Buses are detouring
via South Service Road until further notice.
It
doesn’t matter what the reason is — all you know is you’re stuck in three lanes
of bumper to bumper traffic GOing nowhere…
Your
trip may be delayed due to a police investigation, because your driver was
assaulted…
Then
there’s the proverbial double-decker breakdown due to
coolant leaks, diesel fuel leaks, engines dying, and diesel fumes inside the
bus.
On
rare occasions, a medical emergency will delay the trip…
In
these events, please identify yourself to the driver if you have first aid or
medical training. Everyone else, please
stay seated and keep quite. The driver
has to manage the situation as best they can and doesn’t need to waste time
getting around passengers who are milling about in the aisle, especially if
it’s in the upstairs saloon of a double-decker bus.
We
all know the GTA becomes nearly paralyzed when inclement weather strikes. The QEW in Niagara is no exception…
Delays
of 45+ minutes are not uncommon during blizzard-like conditions. This delay negates a driver’s layover time at
the end of a scheduled two hour trip.
Now imagine you are a report driver from the Hamilton garage assigned to
cover a Niagara Falls crew. You need
extra time to get to The Falls garage to start your day. After nigh onto ten hours of near constant
driving on your shift, you have to drive home in that mess on the QEW. Now consider the winter of 2018 which had a
high incidence of bad weather days. IMO,
these drivers sometimes draw on superhuman reserves of stamina. We need to be sensitive to what they go
through. One silver-haired passenger on
Route 12 once put it to me this way: “Ask not what your driver can do for you —
ask what you can do for your driver.”
Again,
it’s important to remember the advice in section 6 above, because a delay can happen at any time.
8. Are you just going
leave that mess?
Drivers
like to present their passengers with a clean bus. Every now and then, passengers forget the
advice in section 6 above resulting in some serious “Name that Stain” scenarios
requiring a change-off of the bus for sanitary reasons. At the end of each trip, drivers perform a
quick inspection of the inside of their vehicle looking for refuse and sleeping
passengers. In a pinch, I’ve done it for
them. Here’s a bit of advice. If you drop your French fries all over the
floor, pick them up and deposit them in the waste bags on board. If you change your infant’s diaper on the
rear seat, don’t leave the soiled diaper behind when you exit. And, dude, if you are going to drink your
beer in the rear of the upstairs saloon of a DD and then repurpose your empty
tallboy as a private latrine, man up and
take the can with you!
9. DANGER, Will
Robinson! DANGER!
The
scheduled buses on Route 12 are the ADL Enviro500 SuperLo double-decker models,
numbered 83xx–84xx currently. Passengers
who head to the upper saloon for the journey must take extra precautions when
leaving the bus. The descent down the
stairs is very steep — steeper than the older model DD’s in the fleet — IMO.
A word of caution… If you’ve packed your suitcase so densely that it’s like a heavy
bag of cement, you’ll have problems getting your luggage in and out of there. This cargo bay design, like that of Megabus,
can be very dangerous. I talked to a
Megabus driver who told me one of his colleagues went to unload a soft-sided
duffle bag thinking it was relatively light weight. It wasn’t; the bag had rolled coins in
it. When the driver tried to catch the
falling bag, he ruptured two discs. That
driver’s career ended that day. Always
execute a “tug test” before unloading luggage!
GO
Transit recognized ADL’s ongoing design flaws in this area. Seats have been removed and a luggage rack has
been installed in the lower saloon of some buses. That, or it’s a bunk bed for youngsters…
10. Why is that GO bus
blocking the right turn lane?
This
question is asked frequently by motorists who are stuck behind a Route 12 bus
that is taking on passengers on the NW corner of Hwy 420 @ Stanley Ave. Google Maps satellite view caught DD #8148 at
the location. It’s not clear whether
#8148 is still moving; buses I’ve been on have rolled forward so as to be even
with the bus shelter. Some motorists
become impatient, go around the bus, and cut in front of it whilst passengers
are boarding. Doesn’t this vehicular
maneuver contravene the Highway Traffic Act section 140(3)?
There
is a solution, and that is to have passengers board the buses at the Ontario
Travel Information Centre. The facility
is already owned by Government of Ontario.
Years ago an employee at the information centre told me talks about this
strategy had taken place with Metrolinx, but nothing came of the matter. Maybe Metrolinx used the word “soon”, and the
employee didn’t take the term in the proper context.
Conclusion
Perhaps
our new premier, Doug Ford, can resolve some of the issues described
herein. He already lit a fire under
someone at Metrolinx to get GO Transit’s real-time
bus information service rolled out — at least I assume it was
Doug.
Do
you have your own perspectives (passenger or otherwise) travelling Route
12? Please add them to the comments.
Happy
trails!
10 comments:
Wow, I think I'll stick to my car. Anyone who could figure this out on the first try should be eligible for an honorary doctoral degree.
Very impressive post, Ian!
It is amazing how daunting transit can be to not only tourists, but also locals!
Wow. Just wow.
[Where’s the *applause!* emoji in this comment box?]
A few things:
1) I have long pondered the utility of the “Fairview @ Maple” stops. I noticed a few times where they were necessary to time a transfer to Burlington Transit #101, but I was nervous to try that…and didn’t really need to anyway. Interestingly enough, I used the “2nd southbound stop” just last week. Or more precisely, the “improvised, halfway between Maple and Brant, stop” that seemed reasonable to that run’s driver as I made my way to the Second Cup (thanks again to that driver – probably saved me 5 minutes).
2) You are more optimistic about the “12 -> 47 -> 40” route to Pearson Airport. I have done it before, but I rarely find times where it’s faster than the “12 -> LSW -> UPX”. I would think about this very differently if the #40 stopped at the Burlington P+R/CRPL.
3) Good point about the B’ton-bound stop on Stanley @ 420. I’m less concerned about the effects on right-turning motorists, but I suspect that Travel Information Centre would provide a more comfortable stop for riders. That's reason enough. Of the current stop designs, my biggest beef is with Stoney Creek: I find the time and annoyance of the ‘tour du bloc’ through the industrial area to be extraordinary. It seems to me that the bus used to use the plaza parking lot at times where it was likely to be empty, but I haven’t seen that happen in a while.
Last thing: please do direct message me if you know of any potential channels to make this notorious route better for riders.
Some observations...
- Those LCD screens are silly. What is this, Star Wars opening credits? Just show the next stop and the destination without confusing font sizes
- Every town/city in Niagara (but for Welland) have separate Megabus/GO/NRT terminals and good luck transferring between them. If GO ever made it to Welland, I'm sure they'd pick a spot by the canal just so they didn't have to leave the highway.
- When Megabus/Coach Canada abandoned the Highway 8 run, GO should have immediately offered replacement service, even on a limited scale. Beamsville is 48 minute hike from "Beamsville" GO station. What about people who need the hospital in St. Catharines, Grimsby or Hamilton? Chuck you, Farley. Get a lift.
- Figure out Grimsby, once and for all. Lay some asphalt at Casablanca and consolidate everything there. Oh right, except it too is a 40 minute stroll into town
- The Mountain. Canada Coach Lines/FunTrek used to provide a daily Highway 20 service between Niagara Falls and Hamilton via Fonthill and Smithville. One daily round trip. See Highway 8 justification, above
- Fort Erie. Another NRT/Megabus operating to different termini situation
Of course, demand, or lack of it, is a huge factor in deciding where things go and how convenient routes should be, but if you make Burlington-Falls an express run every hour, you can offer concurrent local services so that least "the locals" get the ability to move within and outside of their areas without radically inconveniencing cheapos from Toronto who don't qualify for the casino bus.
Shaun,
All your points are well taken. Stoney Creek warrants its own story — the deplorable road conditions, the disconnected railway spur line that drivers stop for, etc. I recall one evening driver who would turn left onto Nash Rd. and then into the P+R lot to take on and discharge passengers. Another (on Sundays) would turn left onto Nash Rd. and effect a U-turn through the first empty parking lot they came to. I've previously called for GO Transit to stop servicing Stoney Creek until Kenora Ave., Bancroft St., and Nash Rd. were resurfaced: https://bit.ly/2uQYdma
I think I'll walk....
Just an FYI, The 7-Eleven on Victoria is no longer there and hasn't been for some time. That being said use the washroom before you board because the GO buses have no facilities on board.
Thank you for your update, Lori. I was relying on my memory and Google Maps 2018 data: https://bit.ly/2uGiKdY
Let's change "jumbo Slurpee from the 7-Eleven" to a "large wonton soup from Country Fresh Donuts" (across the street). I do hope they are still in business.
Ian, they are indeed still in business.
An update… The bus stop on the southeast corner of Fairview St. and Maple Ave. was decommissioned on Sept. 24.
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