The crosstown expressway should have been built - if we had it, we wouldn't have the mess we have now on the DVP and Allen. You can thank Toronto's special interest groups for this mistake. Instead we have an under-used subway line that will eventually go to Vaughan.
Successful protests against criss-crossing the city with freeways 40 years ago have absolutely nothing to do with the current plan to expand the subway towards Vaughan. Describing one as a direct result of the other is illogical.
And if there were more highways, more people who currently take transit would say "hey, I'll just drive, it's faster" and buy cars. Within a short time the new highway would be just as jammed as the old, and we'd be back to square one.
In regards to the "eventually to Vaughan" expansion, many strong transit supporters (including myself) also feel that the TTC should properly maintain and improve what already exists before making large new expansions. It's because of the politics of funding formulas that governments find it easier to make grandiose announcements allocating billions to new projects, rather than steady, regular investments of millions every year we need to maintain infrastructure.
Finally, privatization: terrible idea, because it makes the erroneous assumption that all worthwhile transit lines must be profitable. It disregards the "chicken and egg" problem, ie. transit lines are most heavily used when the areas they serve are very dense; but areas do not get built-up to that density unless they are well served by transit. A solid transit infrastructure needs to come first, with payoffs years or decades down the road. And the payoffs don't come directly back to the transit line in the form of fares; they come indirectly to society and government in the form of tax dollars and jobs generated by the resulting development. The problem is that both governments and corporations are ill-suited for that far-distant type of planning, since governments are always catering to the next election, and corporations to the next fiscal quarter.
A few more thoughts to consider:
- why must transit be profitable enough to "pay for itself" when nobody expects any highway to "pay for itself" (in Ontario, anyway, where "toll" is a dirty four letter word).
- most of the known problems with Toronto's transit infrastructure have their root cause in decades of inadequate funding; so pointing to these problems as justification that transit doesn't work and we should cut funding further is pretty brutal.
- all those fans of privatization should keep in mind the ongoing debacle of the Highway 407, which shows that corporations can be just as idiotic as governments -- but at least governments are somewhat accountable to the population as a whole.