People are complaining about Toronto's snow removal before it has even snowed
It may be hard to believe that 2023 forecasts are predictingan early blastofwinter weatheracross Canada after ourunusually mild startto October, but a heavier-than-usual dose of snowis indeed on its way— and people are already grumbling about how Toronto will handle it.
It's a well-known fact that the City has historically been awful at clearingsidewalksandbike lanesof snow, and it seems that come winter, we are somehow ill-equipped to handle the natural phenomenon that happens every single year and that we knew was coming.
01/19 Anger grows as#CityofTOsnow clearing leaves pedestrians and cyclists in the lurch | via@blogTOhttps://t.co/tkrNA3m22xpic.twitter.com/t40TgyIkTL
— Transit Toronto (@transittoronto)January 20, 2022
Residents are perennially up in arms over parking lotsbeing plowed perfectlywhile pedestrians and cyclists are left to navigatearound mounds of the white stuffor just give up andwalk on the road, and this year, people aren't expecting much to change.
So, when the Cityannounced this weekthat it is "geared up" for the season with "a comprehensive and highly coordinated snow and ice response plan," the public wasn't buying it.
Well, they sure werent prepared last winter
— tdot (@aldabous1)October 17, 2023
Some onReddit are joking that the firms who won the$1.4 billion decade-long snow removal contracts多伦多“齿轮传动更容易清洁电动汽车erything on the road and shove it all onto the sidewalk" more than anything else, and also geared up to "totally ignore" certain neighbourhoods.
The overall tone online seems to be one of "we'll believe it when we see it," especially after reports from Toronto's auditor general have shown thattens of millions of dollarshave been lost over the years due to the mismanagement of contractors, including overpaying for work "not performed as required."
Less than half of the recommendations for improvements that the auditor general made in these reportsended up actually being implemented,according to aJune 2023 winter maintenance follow-up, so perhaps we're justified in already expecting the worst.
would be nice if they shoveled my street more than once a month this time
— Happi (@happiHD)October 17, 2023
Still, officials vowed at a press conference Tuesday that they will "work smarter" this season, employing new technology and more diligent oversight of the whole process.
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