AMT quietly cancels $103-million bid from Bombardier for double-decker train cars
Jason Magder, Montreal Gazette
Published on: May 17, 2016 | Last Updated: May 17, 2016 5:53 PM EDT
The Agence métropolitaine de transport says it’s baffled as to why the company that normally makes its trains can’t outfit them with all their normal features.
The AMT cancelled a $103-million call for tenders for 24 double-decker train cars, for which Bombardier Transportation was the only bidder. The cancellation could mean delays getting much-anticipated double-decker trains on the overcrowded Deux-Montagnes line.
“The bid was considered not to have conformed to the call for tenders,” AMT spokesperson Fanie St-Pierre said. “So we cancelled the tender process. We’ll see now if what we have asked can be provided by other companies aside from Bombardier.”
St-Pierre admitted it’s somewhat strange that Bombardier said in its bid it cannot furnish several items that are standard on AMT trains: screens announcing the next stop, an intercom and a passenger-detection system. She pointed out that Bombardier has built all the agency’s cars, and most of its locomotives to date, and never had a problem providing those features up to now.
Bombardier also said it is not able to build the trains within the 24-month period stipulated in the contract, saying it needs 36 months to build the cars
, according to St-Pierre.
“We’re trying to understand why Bombardier submitted this offer like this,” St-Pierre said.
A spokesperson for Bombardier did not return calls from the Montreal Gazetteon Tuesday.
The AMT went to tender last December on the double-decker cars to be used on the Candiac, Vaudreuil-Hudson and St-Jérôme lines. The new cars would allow the AMT to move the old cars to the agency’s busiest Deux-Montagnes Line, bringing double-deckers to that line for the first time. The AMT plans to take the MR-90 cars currently used on that line out of circulation for several months so they can be recommissioned.
St-Pierre said now the agency has to decide if it will issue a new call for tenders, and if so, whether to alter the provision that requires 25 per cent of the trains to be made in Canada.
“We know there are international companies that picked up the documents (in December when the call for tenders was issued),” St-Pierre said.
She added it’s possible Bombardier can still win a contract to provide the trains if its bid conforms to a new call for tenders.
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St-Pierre said it’s too soon to know if the cancellation will affect the agency’s timeframe to get the double decker cars rolling by the end of 2018. She added that the
recent project proposed by the Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec could also affect the tender process, because it could change the AMT’s needs for new cars, since the project calls for the trains on the Deux-Montagnes Line to be replaced with light-rail trains — smaller trains that tend to run more frequently.
Montreal is now on a list of cities disappointed with Bombardier’s rail operations. [...]