Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Man Claims GPS Led Him Into Toronto Transit Tunnel Where Car Got Stuck: TTC

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Feb, 2017 01:05 PM
    TORONTO — A man who allegedly drove his SUV into a streetcar tunnel on Thursday, bringing traffic in downtown Toronto to a halt for several hours, reportedly told transit officials he was following his GPS instructions when his vehicle got stuck.
     
    Toronto Transit Commissio spokesman Brad Ross had no information on where the man was travelling when he drove into the tunnel at one of the city's main downtown transit hubs in the middle of the night.
     
    A streetcar came across the SUV jammed in the tunnel shortly before 5:00 a.m. Thursday morning, he said.
     
    He said stuck cars are not unheard of, but said this one stood out as unusual due to the nature of the tunnel and the distance the vehicle travelled.
     
    "That part of the network, only streetcars use it," Ross said of the tunnel in which the track is raised rather than being imbedded in the road. ". . . . The fact that this car made it almost 800 metres to the Union Station platform is very unusual. Cars have gone down there in the past, but typically they get stuck far sooner than that."
     
    Ross said that shortly after the man got stuck on the tracks, he temporarily fled the scene.
     
    "When we got there, the driver of the car tried to run back down the tunnel, (the operator) stopped him from doing so, and he ran out the other way," Ross said.
     
    Ross said he was unsure of the timeline, but said the man later returned to the scene and claimed GPS directions had inadvertently led him into the downtown tunnel. Transit enforcement officers issued him a ticket, but Ross did not know of any criminal charges.
     
    A specialized crane was needed to remove the vehicle from the tunnel, Ross said, since a tow truck would also have been unable to enter the tunnel without damage.
     
    He said the process led to a nearly six-hour delay on two of the city's busiest streetcar routes.
     
    Service resumed by late Thursday morning.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    UBC President 'Deeply Regrets' Cancellation Of John Furlong Speech

    UBC President 'Deeply Regrets' Cancellation Of John Furlong Speech
    VANCOUVER — University of British Columbia president Santa Ono has apologized for the school's decision to cancel a planned speech by former Vancouver Olympic CEO John Furlong.

    UBC President 'Deeply Regrets' Cancellation Of John Furlong Speech

    Provinces Dig In Heels On Federal Health Funding, Renew Call For Trudeau Meeting

    Provinces Dig In Heels On Federal Health Funding, Renew Call For Trudeau Meeting
    OTTAWA — The federal government's push to close bilateral health-funding deals with individual provinces and territories appears to be losing momentum.

    Provinces Dig In Heels On Federal Health Funding, Renew Call For Trudeau Meeting

    Hundreds Of Veterans Likely Affected By Federal Cuts To Medicinal Pot Allotment

    Hundreds Of Veterans Likely Affected By Federal Cuts To Medicinal Pot Allotment
    OTTAWA — Almost three-quarters of veterans using medical marijuana will feel the impact this spring when the federal government imposes a new limit on the amount of weed for which it will pay.

    Hundreds Of Veterans Likely Affected By Federal Cuts To Medicinal Pot Allotment

    Oldest Known Member Of Southern B.C. Killer Whale Pod Believed Dead

    Oldest Known Member Of Southern B.C. Killer Whale Pod Believed Dead
    VANCOUVER — The death of a whale considered the oldest in the West Coast's southern resident population could particularly affect one animal who may have lost yet another adoptive mother, a wildlife biologist says.

    Oldest Known Member Of Southern B.C. Killer Whale Pod Believed Dead

    RCMP Investigating Body Found In Parking Lot Of Nanaimo Business

    RCMP Investigating Body Found In Parking Lot Of Nanaimo Business
    NANAIMO, B.C. — RCMP says its investigating the death of a man in Nanaimo, B.C.

    RCMP Investigating Body Found In Parking Lot Of Nanaimo Business

    Family Of Lion Dancers Ready To Roar At Vancouver's Chinatown Spring Festival

    Family Of Lion Dancers Ready To Roar At Vancouver's Chinatown Spring Festival
    VANCOUVER — After Jun Ing performed as a lion dancer for the first time in Vancouver's Chinese New Year parade in the 1980s, he remembers wishing it had lasted longer.

    Family Of Lion Dancers Ready To Roar At Vancouver's Chinatown Spring Festival