ADRM
Senior Member
Stephen Holyday is against anything that supports cyclists or pedestrians.
If you're pissing off Holyday, you're doing the right thing.
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Stephen Holyday is against anything that supports cyclists or pedestrians.
The same rings true for John Tory.If you're pissing off Holyday, you're doing the right thing.
The same rings true for John Tory.
“Two downtown city councillors are pushing for a bike lane on University Avenue as part of the city’s response to COVID-19 but Mayor John Tory is accusing them of “playing politics” with the crisis.”
- Global News
Councillors Cressy and Layton pushing for cycle tracks on University Avenue from Adelaide to Davenport.
Councillors push bike lanes on University Avenue as part of COVID fight
Two councillors see lanes as way to move health-care workers, while a third councillor objects to cost and disruption.www.thestar.com
I actually would like to see the center divider be repurposed with a bike lane on it, but this would obviously be a lot of work. And difficult in some areas where there are statues etc.
I voted for Tory in 2014 but not in 2018, and these kinds of comments and lack of vision is precisely why.The same rings true for John Tory.
“Two downtown city councillors are pushing for a bike lane on University Avenue as part of the city’s response to COVID-19 but Mayor John Tory is accusing them of “playing politics” with the crisis.”
- Global News
I voted for Tory in 2014 but not in 2018, and these kinds of comments and lack of vision is precisely why.
That won't be contemplated.
What is being contemplated is dropping one lane of traffic in each direction.
Tory is a maintainer, not a disrupter- change comes at small increments for him (unless initiated by others like Keesmaat). He was what Toronto wanted after the chaos of Rob Ford, but the city needs to move beyond him now.I voted for Tory in 2014 but not in 2018, and these kinds of comments and lack of vision is precisely why.
Talk is cheap, we need action on essential mobility infrastructure in this city including cycling facilities. Tory seems pretty flexible with most policy with the exception for any initiative that improves mobility issues for vulnerable populations, or vision zero and complete streets initiatives, totally ironic because he campaigned on vision zero in particular.
Cities across the globe are expanding sidewalk space and performing road diets in favour of cycling lanes, and Toronto's leadership is one of inaction and lost opportunity. Tory has the best excuse so far in his tenure to "pilot" a host of cycling improvements across the city without disapproval from pretty much any segment of the population with the sole exception of a minority of people who think like Stephen Holyday.
Most people want to be left alone to do their own thing and stay in their comfort zone, even if it's not best practices.These kinds of comments from him are aligned with what the majority of voters want.
yes, im well aware what the actual agenda of bike lanes in downtown is. Because a solution that doesnt impact the number of lanes for cars is never considered. Its blatantly obvious.
As I drove eastward on Gerrard from Broadview to Coxwell I’m struck by the number of cyclists trying to navigate between streetcars, automobiles and parked cars.... there’s only about two feet of clearance, and then you’re in dooring range. This stretch of Gerrard needs to have all parking removed and replaced by hard-separated bike lanes on both sides. Keep the bike lane narrow and two lanes of traffic both ways should be doable. Then construct more Green P spaces to accommodate the now displaced cars.