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Transit system overhaul a disaster
OPINION
https://www.winnipegfreepress.com/local/2026/03/03/survey-results-crystal-cl...
WHEN more than eight in 10 of your core customers say you’ve made things worse, it’s not a minor hiccup, it’s a collapse in confidence.
That’s exactly where Winnipeg Transit finds itself after its sweeping network overhaul launched last year.
The redesign was billed as a bold modernization — a smarter, more efficient system built around frequent primary routes and timed connections.
Instead, it has produced a level of dissatisfaction among downtown riders that is as striking as it is alarming.
A recent Probe Research survey of downtown bus users, commissioned by the Downtown Winnipeg BIZ, found that more than 80 per cent are unhappy with the new system.
Commute times to downtown have increased by an average of 22 minutes. One-third of respondents now say it takes at least an hour to reach the city’s core — 10 times more riders facing hour-long trips than under the previous network.
An hour to get downtown? In Winnipeg?
This is not Toronto. It’s not Chicago. It’s not even Calgary. Winnipeg is a mid-sized prairie city. The idea that a third of surveyed riders now spend an hour on a bus just to reach downtown should set off alarm bells at city hall.
Instead, we’re told the overhaul was the right decision, even if the rollout hasn’t been perfect. The mayor has acknowledged Transit didn’t get it right and has promised to keep tweaking the system until it works properly.
That’s an extraordinary admission. But you don’t “tweak” your way out of an 80 per cent dissatisfaction rate. You don’t fine-tune your way past a 22-minute average increase in commute times.
The complaints are consistent: longer travel times, more transfers and inconvenient connections.
The new system relies heavily on transfers between primary and feeder routes. In theory, this creates efficiency. In practice, it works only if buses are frequent, connections are tight and reliability is near flawless. Otherwise, a missed transfer can turn a reasonable commute into a marathon.
Seventy per cent of surveyed riders say they visit downtown less often because of the changes. Half say they sometimes choose other ways to get there, including ride-hailing services.
That should terrify transit planners. Public transportation depends on ridership. If people who have options start abandoning the system, fare revenue drops and political support erodes. What remains is a shrinking base of riders who rely on transit because they have no alternative — seniors, students, lower-income workers and individuals with disabilities.
And survey results suggest those riders are among the most dissatisfied.
Older users report particularly high levels of frustration. Riders with disabilities are even more likely to say nearly every aspect of the system is worse.
That is not a side issue. It goes to the heart of transit’s purpose. In a city like Winnipeg, public transportation is not primarily a lifestyle choice. It is a necessity for many.
If the people who depend on it most are the least satisfied, something has gone profoundly wrong.
Yes, the survey was self-selecting. Critics will argue that unhappy riders are more likely to respond. That’s true. But you don’t reach 80 per cent dissatisfaction through statistical flukes alone. And you certainly don’t manufacture a 22-minute jump in average commute times out of thin air.
These are lived experiences.
What makes this all the more mind-boggling is that none of the core complaints were unforeseeable. Transit experts have long known that forced transfers can deter ridership if not executed carefully. Longer door-to-door travel times are poison to public transportation systems. Reliability is everything.
Yet here we are, months after implementation, with a third of downtown riders now facing hour-long trips and the city scrambling to make adjustments.
The mayor’s pledge to keep retooling until it’s right is welcome. But it raises a difficult question: how did this get rolled out in its current form in the first place?
Major network overhauls require rigorous modelling, pilot testing and contingency planning. They demand careful attention to how winter weather, traffic delays and missed connections compound over an entire journey.
If the result is a widespread perception that the system is slower and more cumbersome, then either the modelling was overly optimistic or the implementation fell short.
There are proposed fixes on the table — additional buses, extended service hours and route adjustments aimed at improving downtown access. Those may help at the margins. But the scale of dissatisfaction suggests more than marginal change is needed.
Transit can’t afford to normalize hour-long downtown commutes. It can’t shrug at a 70 per cent drop in downtown visitation among surveyed riders. It can’t accept that vulnerable populations feel the system has deteriorated.
Until commute times fall, transfers become seamless and reliability improves dramatically, the city will not be able to spin this as a successful modernization. The numbers tell a different story.
And right now, that story is one of a transit overhaul that missed the mark — badly.
tom.brodbeck@freepress.mb.camailto:tom.brodbeck@freepress.mb.ca