This article was posted in the Metro Line thread but has lots of good info regarding VL.



I get the VLW Director is being extra careful with his statements with no guarantees, but it sounds like their actual timelines are:
  • 2026: all track laid
  • 2027: wrapping up outstanding construction items and starting commissioning work
  • 2028: more commissioning + testing
  • 2029: open for public use
Which makes his statement that the project is "on-schedule" kind of ironic. Is the project really on schedule when you've adjusted the project schedule (including finish date) like four times now?
Seems very ambitious to have all track laid by the end of this year especially if they no longer pour track slab in the winter. I guess they could form and place rebar over the next couple of months to prepare for the warmer months but seems like a stretch. Maybe that cool form work traveller will be able to speed up the process.

Admin said last year that the amount of vandalism is outpacing the budget to fix the stuff that gets damaged. They need a larger budget yesterday.
I feel like increasing the funding does nothing other than waste money, I’d rather spend it on 1 guard / more surveillance to stop the people who keep breaking the glass.
 
Curious how the vandalism of the Valley Line compares against the high floor line. Is it the station design? Or is it that there are more stops on this line?

Does TransEd fix the vandalized elements or the city? Will there be consideration towards how the West Line stations are designed (amount of glass vs other materials etc...)?

Ok, I think i am out of questions.
 
I feel like increasing the funding does nothing other than waste money, I’d rather spend it on 1 guard / more surveillance to stop the people who keep breaking the glass.
According to Chief Bylaw Officer David Jones, during the March 19, 2025 debate about funding 30 additional TPOs:

"I did some math a few years ago because I was asked what we'd need to get 24/7 presence of TPOs at every transit location, and it was something astronomical like 800."

When the 30 new TPOs are fully onboarded in July, Edmonton will have 126 TPOs. Keep in mind that it's not a 1-1 ratio with one officer per location; there's something like three shifts per day, plus they need coverage for overtime/special events, sick and vacation days, etc. And if ETS tried to get this coverage with commissionaires to save money, then we're back where we started with people vandalizing things and guards standing off to the side telling dispatch to tell TPOs to get there after their five other calls that are higher priority.

And to be clear, I'd 100% all for having more TPOs, I'm just giving you some context regarding what is required to achieve that. And given they can only train 15-odd TPOs at a time (Edmonton runs two classes per year which also accommodate peace officer recruits for agencies around the province, hence why these 30 new ones are being onboarded in two batches of 15), it'd be a few years before they could reach that 24/7 coverage - meaning the vandalism budget would likely need to be increased at least temporarily while waiting for that additional presence to have an effect.
 
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Just thought about something. Who actually uses the Davies park and ride? Like who would the target be?

Just looking at a map today it suddenly dawned on me how weird of a location it is. Anyone living north of the industrial is better off just driving, busing, or using the train from those neighborhoods to head downtown.

And the only areas south of the industrial are Millwoods, which is served by the train or quicker bus connections to it. The gateway/Calgary trail and east industrial lands really cut off any other residential areas.

Anyone south of Millwoods is driving 60% of the way to downtown already, so may as well just go the whole way?

I’m sure some people use it to save money on DT parking, or others use to better connect to the train vs buses. But it’s just so odd of a placement vs an end of line park and ride like century park was.

Was it chosen simply because of land availability? Wouldn’t something at the current terminus be more sensible?
Well one of the passengers now is myself from Davies as I live in Millwoods and it's a very quick short drive to Park at the park and ride and ride all the way to Rogers Place. I've also noticed at the hockey games that's more people have been starting to take the train, this last game the other day versus Nashville the train was pretty packed on the way home after the game. I think there's actually a lot of people that will start using the train as soon as they take the time to discover it. It seems almost every trip I overhear one person or another trying to figure out where to get off because this is the first time they've taken the train. I do hope that's more businesses or stuff gets built around Davies but I do think that things are progressing maybe a bit slower than we still would hope but at least they are progressing and more and more people are discovering the Valley Line and Davies
 
According to Chief Bylaw Officer David Jones, during the March 19, 2025 debate about funding 30 additional TPOs:

"I did some math a few years ago because I was asked what we'd need to get 24/7 presence of TPOs at every transit location, and it was something astronomical like 800."

When the 30 new TPOs are fully onboarded in July, Edmonton will have 126 TPOs. Keep in mind that it's not a 1-1 ratio with one officer per location; there's something like three shifts per day, plus they need coverage for overtime/special events, sick and vacation days, etc. And if ETS tried to get this coverage with commissionaires to save money, then we're back where we started with people vandalizing things and guards standing off to the side telling dispatch to tell TPOs to get there after their five other calls that are higher priority.

And to be clear, I'd 100% all for having more TPOs, I'm just giving you some context regarding what is required to achieve that. And given they can only train 15-odd TPOs at a time (Edmonton runs two classes per year which also accommodate peace officer recruits for agencies around the province, hence why these 30 new ones are being onboarded in two batches of 15), it'd be a few years before they could reach that 24/7 coverage - meaning the vandalism budget would likely need to be increased at least temporarily while waiting for that additional presence to have an effect.
The only actual solution is cutting off the drug supply by properly imprisoning anyone involved with narcotics, and actual jail for criminals. The leniency of our court system is what allows this. A very small number of people cause the vast majority of disorder in our city. If those 200-300 people were all in prison for 15+ years, we’d see incredible improvements.
 

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