Mayor John Tory accepts Twitter challenge to ride in hot subway car - Action News
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Toronto

Mayor John Tory accepts Twitter challenge to ride in hot subway car

Bianca Spence's persistence paid off; after tweeting at Mayor John Tory over the course of the summer, he's agreed to feel the heat in one of Toronto's AC-less subway cars.

Torontonian challenges the mayor to ride from Kipling to Kennedy in a car with no AC

Air conditioning on Line 2 subway cars has been patchy all summer, with the TTC promising in June to have everything fixed up by 'next year.' (CBC)

After being challenged on Twitter, Toronto Mayor John Tory has agreed to take a ride in one of the city's subway cars withair conditioning that isn't functioning..

Bianca Spence first issued the challenge in July after enduring sweltering subwayrides on her regular commute.

"I just thought the mayor would want to see what it is like, because I know sometimes people say, 'How bad could it be,' and it's pretty bad!" she said.

When Spence heard nothing back from the mayor's office, she kept pushing.

"Another heat advisory day would come up, and I'd retweet it again, and there was nothing ... and I think it just got really absurd, and I just didn't give up," she said.

A representative for Tory said that he is now in touch with Spence, looking for the right time for the pair to take a ride together from Kipling station to Kennedy station on Line 2, which is where the subway cars without air conditioning have been in service.

Hot subway cars have been an ongoing problem on the TTC this summer, with the air conditioning on almost 25 per cent of cars either broken or not operating at full capacity.

Earlier this summer, the TTCsaidthe hot carscannot be taken out of service because the systemneeds all of its cars during peak periods, andthat ithas crews at more than one work site focused on the hot car problem, which was identified as an issue last year.

"By next year, everything should be fine," said TTC spokesperson Susan Sperling.in an interview with CBC News in late June.

Tory said Monday that he has been meeting with the TTC to work on the problem.

"I'm not happy with a status quo that has had us take as long as has been taken to get all the cars fixed," he said.

"We're going to do much, much better next year."