Winnipeg Transit service reduced as city struggles to recruit dozens of drivers to fill vacancies

A lack of transit drivers has led to a reduction in service in Winnipeg, as the city struggles to fill dozens of empty positions.
City Councillor Janice Lukes, chair of the public works committee, said Winnipeg Transit is short about 50 drivers.
If numbers don't bounce back, she says the city will not be able to return to pre-pandemic levels of service.
The City of Winnipeg told CTV News in a statement that Winnipeg Transit is operating at a six per cent reduction in overall service levels, as approved in the most recent budget update.
The city also says they are dealing with an increase in operator absenteeism, including longer recovery times before returning to work.
The combined result, the city says, is a small number of buses designated as DNOs, or Did Not Operate in its schedule, resulting in about one per cent or less of their daily service hours being cancelled.
“While we never want to see DNOs, what we are experiencing currently is intermittent and is limited to the peak periods (rush hours),” the statement read.
The city’s human resources department is working on a strategy with a consulting firm to address the issue of recruitment, but there’s no word on how long that will take.
Meantime, the union representing operators said vacancy numbers don’t tell the whole story. There are about 100 more drivers on short or long-term leave of absence for medical or personal reasons.
“Some of them are actually due to accidents and assaults. Some of them are not yet coming back to work. So on paper, they are operators, but they are not going to be driving anytime soon,” said Romeo Ignacio, president of the Amalgamated Transit Union Local 1505.
Ignacio said the number one barrier to recruitment is safety, an issue he has raised with the mayor and some city councillors.
“We have a number of recommendations, and they're looking into it,” he said.
“However, safety isn't just specific to transit. There's still issues out there, just being out in public. Even our operators, who are not driving the buses, are getting assaulted, as well. So we think the province and the city could do a lot more to address the issue of overall safety within the city.”
- With files from CTV's Jon Hendricks
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
BREAKING | PM Trudeau presents premiers $196B health-care funding deal, including $46B in new funding
The federal government is pledging to increase health funding to Canada's provinces and territories by $196.1 billion over the next 10 years, in a long-awaited deal aimed at addressing Canada's crumbling health-care systems with $46.2 billion in new funding.

Inflation 'turning the corner' after multiple rate increases: BoC governor
After raising interest rates eight consecutive times, Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem told an audience in Quebec City on Tuesday that inflation is showing signs of 'turning the corner' and that the coming year 'will be different.'
Newborn, toddler saved from rubble in quake-hit Syrian town
Residents digging through a collapsed building in a northwest Syrian town discovered a crying infant whose mother appears to have given birth to her while buried underneath the rubble from this week's devastating earthquake, relatives and a doctor said Tuesday.
BREAKING | B.C. to make National Day for Truth and Reconciliation a paid statutory holiday
The British Columbia government has introduced legislation to make Sept. 30 a paid statutory holiday marking the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation.
Canadians now expect to need $1.7M in order to retire: BMO survey
Canadians now believe they need $1.7 million in savings in order to retire, a 20 per cent increase from 2020, according to a new BMO survey. The eye-watering figure is the largest sum since BMO first started surveying Canadians about their retirement expectations 13 years ago.
3 men missing after canceled rap gig were fatally shot
Three men who disappeared after planning to rap at a Detroit party were killed by multiple gunshots, police said Tuesday, five days after their bodies were found in a vacant, rat-infested building.
U.S. actor facing sex charges in Nevada also facing charge in B.C.
A former actor in the movie 'Dances With Wolves' who is facing eight sex-related charges in Nevada is also facing a charge in British Columbia.
Germany, Denmark, Netherlands pledge Ukraine Leopard 1 tanks
Germany, Denmark and the Netherlands announced Tuesday that they plan to provide Ukraine with at least 100 refurbished Leopard 1 battle tanks, a pledge that comes as Kyiv anticipates a new Russian offensive around the anniversary of its invasion.
Dog named Kujo likely to 'kill or injure,' B.C. court rules in euthanasia decision
A dog named Kujo will be euthanized after a B.C. judge determined the animal is "likely to kill or injure" if released from the pound.