Sunday, January 11, 2026
ADVT 
National

Transit association says more police, security needed on city buses, trains

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Apr, 2023 03:45 PM
  • Transit association says more police, security needed on city buses, trains

OTTAWA — Cities need to hire more security officers for their transit systems and give them more power to curb dangerous behaviour on trains and buses, the Canadian Urban Transit Association said Monday as it published a list of recommendations to respond to a recent spate of violent attacks on public transit.

The association made 27 recommendations to improve rider and staff safety on public transit, including a demand to hire more on-the-ground peace officers, special constables, and police officers.

"It's obvious, I think, to Canadians that we've got to address this issue," said association president Marco D'Angelo. 

He said the federal government should also amend the Criminal Code to include specific offences against all transit workers, not just transit operators.

The recommendations emphasized that public transit systems reflect the communities they serve and that issues such as homelessness, substance use, and mental health impact transit systems when left unaddressed.

The Canadian Urban Transit Association began its report on how to improve public safety last summer but the desire to do something has only been heightened by more violent attacks on transit over the winter in multiple cities.

This month in British Columbia, a 17-year-old boy riding public transit was fatally stabbed near Vancouver and a man on a Surrey-area bus was left with life-threatening issues from a throat slash. 

In Alberta, an Edmonton-area man was stabbed while waiting for a bus, and in Calgary one person was sent to hospital after a daytime shooting on a bus travelling in the city's downtown.

In late March, 16-year-old Gabriel Magalhaes was stabbed to death at a Toronto subway station. Toronto police said he was the victim of an "unprovoked" attack. 

He was at least the fourth person to die in a violent attack at a Toronto subway station in the previous 12 months. Several more were seriously injured in stabbings and assaults. In at least one case a woman was pushed onto the tracks.

Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland, who was in Toronto to make a funding announcement to buy electric buses for the Toronto Transit Commission, said "these recent acts of violence on the TTC are concerning to us all."

"The TTC is the lifeblood, the circulatory system of the city, and we need to do more to ensure the safety of the great people who work for the TTC and literally keep our city going."

She pointed to government funding to address poverty, mental health and addictions as another way transit safety can be improved. 

"But it's not enough, and we need to do more," she said.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Premiers urge regular health-care reviews

Premiers urge regular health-care reviews
Ottawa has offered more than $46 billion to provinces and territories to augment the Canada Health Transfer but the country's premiers say they're "disappointed" with the amount.

Premiers urge regular health-care reviews

Canada's foreign property tax: 'A hostile act'

Canada's foreign property tax: 'A hostile act'
Rep. Brian Higgins is asking Secretary of State Antony Blinken to officially object to Canada's new federal tax on underused, foreign-owned housing, which is coming due in April.  The one per cent levy applies to certain foreign non-resident owners of Canadian property located in areas with a core population of at least 10,000 people.    

Canada's foreign property tax: 'A hostile act'

Hells Angels properties forfeited to B.C.: court

Hells Angels properties forfeited to B.C.: court
Justice Mary Newbury writes that the lower-court ruling was "tainted" in several ways, including by failing to link Hells Angels' efforts to avoid criminal detection with the club's demonstrated “penchant for secrecy” and “preoccupation with rats and snitches."

Hells Angels properties forfeited to B.C.: court

84 year old woman in hospital with serious injuries after being struck by a flatbed truck

84 year old woman in hospital with serious injuries after being struck by a flatbed truck
The victim was crossing Cambie Street at West 41st Avenue at 9 a.m. on February 14 when she was struck by a flatbed transport truck that was making a right turn to head south on Cambie. She sustained serious injuries, and remains in hospital.

84 year old woman in hospital with serious injuries after being struck by a flatbed truck

Human remains located in Cloverdale

Human remains located in Cloverdale
On Wednesday close to 12:45pm, Police responded to a report of what appeared to be human remains found in a wooded area on an empty lot in the 19000-block of Fraser Highway. Police are working to identify the deceased individual.

Human remains located in Cloverdale

Canada faces fresh pressure on military spending

Canada faces fresh pressure on military spending
Member states, including Canada, first agreed in 2014 to "aim" toward spending two per cent of their GDP on defence over the next decade following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine’s Crimean Peninsula.

Canada faces fresh pressure on military spending