The Free Press: Overhaul upheaval
As written in the Free Press by Julia-Simone Rutgers and Malak Abas, featuring Orly Linovski, Acting Head and Associate Professor, Department of City Planning
When transit flows, a neighbourhood thrives.
When buses are frequent, arrive on time and run into the night, it means more kids make it to after-school activities, more students can get to class on time, more shift workers can get home safely late at night and more commuters can leave their vehicles at home.
The end result is robust movement throughout a community, according to Orly Linovski, an urban planning professor at the University of Manitoba.
That was the vision Winnipeg Transit promised as it rolled out its all-new Primary Transit Network earlier this summer.
The new routes and redistribution of bus stops implemented as part of the transit-system overhaul were intended to deliver faster and more reliable service to better serve all corners of a growing city.
A Free Press/Narwhal analysis of the city’s transit system before and after the June 29 transition date reveals a different story.
Read the full article here





