Albertasaurus
Active Member
In order to bend the curve on car ownership, you need to invest more - a lot more - on both transit and inter-city transportation. I live inner city, and still need a car. I wish I didn't, and I bike or walk whenever I can, but the fact is the way this city is built makes it very difficult to get by without a car. Transit here is great if you live on an LRT line and are going somewhere also on a line, but lousy if you're not. Our bus system is circuitous and confusing. It would be great if Calgary had a good enough transit system to get everyone where they needed to go, and a decent enough inter city rail system for DiscoStu to get out of town without taking his car, but it simply doesn't.
If you look at some of the comparable European cities in Calgary's approximate size range - places like Oslo, Helsinki, Copenhagen or Prague - their transit networks have multiple subway (ie, not surface LRT) lines. They have trams. And they have a great inter-city rail system so that even if you don't have a car, it's easy to get around both locally and beyond. Those cities obviously have a big head start on us, and invested in those things a long time ago, but 9 years after the Feds announced funding we haven't even managed to get construction (beyond enabling works) started on the Green Line. Airport LRT is talked about but there's no serious plan to make it happen.
Governments at all levels talk a big game on climate change, for example, but have done precious little to actually enable Canadians to move away from car ownership. Here in Calgary, Council declared a "climate emergency" and showed how serious they are about it by jacking up transit fares every year since. And I lament the tens of billions our Federal government has blown on things like battery plants and subsidies for rich EV buyers, and how much that could have done to build a truly exceptional inter-city rail network linking Canada's major cities.
If you look at some of the comparable European cities in Calgary's approximate size range - places like Oslo, Helsinki, Copenhagen or Prague - their transit networks have multiple subway (ie, not surface LRT) lines. They have trams. And they have a great inter-city rail system so that even if you don't have a car, it's easy to get around both locally and beyond. Those cities obviously have a big head start on us, and invested in those things a long time ago, but 9 years after the Feds announced funding we haven't even managed to get construction (beyond enabling works) started on the Green Line. Airport LRT is talked about but there's no serious plan to make it happen.
Governments at all levels talk a big game on climate change, for example, but have done precious little to actually enable Canadians to move away from car ownership. Here in Calgary, Council declared a "climate emergency" and showed how serious they are about it by jacking up transit fares every year since. And I lament the tens of billions our Federal government has blown on things like battery plants and subsidies for rich EV buyers, and how much that could have done to build a truly exceptional inter-city rail network linking Canada's major cities.