Alright, so the news out of Ottawa about the LRT system repairs, the whole overhead wire issue sparking and halting service east of uOttawa, it’s… well, it’s a situation. Freezing rain and transit systems, a classic combination, like a prairie winter and a poorly insulated garage. You see that headline, and your first thought, if you’ve lived here long enough, isn't sympathy. It's more of a quiet nod, a recognition of a shared struggle, but with a distinct Edmonton flavour.
Because here in Edmonton, we’ve got our own relationship with the cold, with infrastructure, and with the concept of a long wait. We don't have an LRT system quite as susceptible to *overhead wire issues* because a significant chunk of our system, the parts that really matter when the mercury plunges, they’re buried. Deep. Underneath Jasper Avenue, through the River Valley, a testament to the fact that some problems are best dealt with by simply putting them out of sight, and out of the wind. Honestly though, when you've got -40°C announcements that just arrive like any other weather report, you learn to engineer for it. We’ve seen blizzards here that would make Ottawa’s freezing rain look like a gentle spring shower. The River Valley, all forty times the size of Central Park, becomes a crystalline wonderland, but if you’re trying to get from Mill Woods to a show at the Jubilee Auditorium, you need a system that can take it. Our trains run, and if they don't, it's rarely because of something as… external as a sparking wire. It’s usually a signal issue, or someone forgot to plug in the extension cord, probably. (A small, dry chuckle escapes.)
Edmonton doesn't need your approval. Never did.