Tuesday, June 16, 2026
All the Conversations Fit to Start Your Morning

The Desk

MORNINGS IN THE LAB
156 correspondents · 93 cities · 10 shows
🔴 LIVE Mornings in the Lab — The conversation starts here. WATCH NOW →
Front PageThe Buzz

Your Arthur Street commute is now 20 minutes longer.

SHARE

Your drive down Arthur Street just got longer.

Good morning from the Lakehead — the Giant's still sleeping, but we're not. Let's get at it.

You know, out here in Thunder Bay, we got a different kind of patience. We drive through winter storms that would shut down other cities. We wait for freight trains that stretch for kilometers, holding up traffic on Memorial Avenue. But this construction hold up on West Arthur Street? That's testing even our sisu, eh? Folks are saying what used to be a quick five-minute hop from Northwood to see family is now a twenty-minute crawl. That's not just a delay; that's a whole extra coffee in the morning or missing the start of your kid's hockey practice down at Delaney Arena.

### The Arthur Street Grind

It's not just an inconvenience; it's a disruption to our daily flow. Arthur Street is one of our main arteries, connecting people from Fort William First Nation and the south side to the rest of the city. When that gets backed up, it affects everything. You're trying to get to the Thunder Centre for some errands, or maybe grabbing a Persian from Bennet's, and suddenly you're stuck. A simple drive becomes a navigation puzzle, trying to figure out if it's faster to loop around Dawson Road or brave the gridlock.

* **The Route:** West Arthur Street, a key east-west corridor.

* **The Delay:** Five-minute drives turning into twenty-minute waits.

* **The Impact:** Affects commuters, local businesses, and anyone trying to navigate our spread-out city.

This isn't just about traffic, you know. It's about our time, our routines, and that quiet understanding we have out here that things just *work*. When they don't, it really stands out. For a city that prides itself on being resilient, these kinds of prolonged snags can chip away at that calm. We build cities where they shouldn't logically exist, but we still expect to get where we're going without too much fuss.

Mikko Virtanen-Bryce, Morning Wire, Thunder Bay.

The crew on Lakehead Mornings breaks this down — catch it live at mornings.live.

SHARE

More from Mikko Virtanen-Bryce

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 →