British Columbia

Metro Vancouver senior lobbies TransLink for public washroom at Waterfront Station

A New Westminster woman is lobbying TransLink to provide a public washroom in paid fare zone areas at Waterfront Station.

'When people come into Waterfront Station there are no public washrooms unless you are using the SeaBus'

Catherine Nelson has been lobbying Translink for nearly three years to put a public washroom at Waterfront Station. (Bal Brach/CBC News)

A senior from New Westminster, B.C., is lobbying TransLink to add a public washroom at one of Vancouver's busiest transit hubs — Waterfront Station. 

"When people come into Waterfront Station there are no public washrooms unless you are using the SeaBus," said Catherine Nelson.

"I want universally accessible public washrooms in this major transportation hub in paid fare zones."

SeaBus users have a washroom in the paid fare zone, but that doesn't help Nelson and others who use the Canada, Expo or Millennium lines.

Their only option is to go to a nearby A&W restaurant. 

"Certainly I guess people can use the A&W if A&W is ok with that," said Jane Dyson, executive director of the Disability Alliance of B.C. 

"But I think that this should really be a public service, and there are many cities in the world that provide 'public conveniences,' as they say in England."

TransLink told Nelson it's aware of the problem but says washrooms haven't been installed because of cost and safety concerns. 

"The challenges of providing washrooms in public spaces is something cities and transit agencies grapple with around the world," according to TransLink spokesman Chris Bryan.

Nelson says, in the meantime, she'd at least like to see a sign letting transit users know there's no public washroom.