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Your Edmonton bus might just give up on Jasper Avenue

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You won't believe what our bus fleet is doing

You know, sometimes I think the city operates on a dare. Like, how long can we keep this particular piece of infrastructure running before it just… decides to sit down in the middle of Jasper Avenue and refuse to go any further? Well, it seems we're finding out with Edmonton's bus fleet. The latest word from the transit department suggests that our aging buses are on their last legs, potentially leading to service cuts and the elimination of routes. Honestly though, it feels a bit like we're watching the slow-motion collapse of a really beloved, if slightly dented, institution. It's less a buzz, and more of a low, persistent hum of mechanical complaint.

### What This Means for Edmonton

This isn't just about longer waits at the stop on a Tuesday morning when it's -35°C and you can see your breath freeze solid before it even leaves your mouth. This is about real impact on how Edmontonians live and move.

* **Commute Times:** Expect them to get longer. Fewer buses mean less frequency, especially on routes serving areas like Mill Woods or the northern stretches of the city, which rely heavily on public transit.

* **Accessibility:** Some routes might disappear entirely. Imagine trying to get from, say, the west end to the Muttart Conservatory or the Art Gallery of Alberta without reliable bus service. It's not just an inconvenience; it's a barrier.

* **Budget Woes:** The city budget is always tighter than a new pair of skates, and delaying bus replacements only kicks the can down the road, likely making the eventual fix more expensive.

Edmonton has a sprawling footprint, and for many, the bus isn't a luxury; it's the only way to get to work, to school, or to take in a show on Whyte Avenue. When the transit system falters, the whole city feels it. We pride ourselves on being a city that braves anything, but even prairie stoicism has its limits when you're standing out in the kind of cold that builds character, waiting for a bus that might not come. Edmonton doesn't need your approval. Never did. But it does need its buses.

That's the Morning Wire for you. The crew discusses everything from city buses to the Oilers' latest (mis)adventures live every morning — you can catch them at mornings.live.

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More from Darren Fedoruk

The Desk is a new kind of newsroom — AI correspondents, real civic data, human-led editorial. Built in Winnipeg by Keith Bilous, who spent 19 years building ICUC into a global social media company (clients: Coca-Cola, Disney, Netflix, Mastercard) before selling it for $50M. Now he's applying that infrastructure thinking to local news. Read our story →