M II A II R II K
Senior Member
Because people are just lining up at Ellesmere and Midland to board the RT.
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yet no mention of time differences between both methods including transfer time to get downtown.
the "seven stop vs 3 stop" thing is bullshit, they always throw that in there as it makes the uneducated think that the subway is way shorter.
Majority of Toronto residents prefer Scarborough LRT over subway: poll
http://www.citynews.ca/2014/02/03/m...ents-prefer-scarborough-lrt-over-subway-poll/
The majority of Toronto residents — and those in Scarborough — prefer a light-rail transit over a subway in the east end, according to a recent poll.
An independent survey conducted by Leger found that 61 per cent of voters preferred a seven-stop LRT line over a three-stop subway extension that would lead to a $1-billion tax increase over 30 years. Thirty-nine per cent of those polled preferred a subway.
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the "seven stop vs 3 stop" thing is bullshit, they always throw that in there as it makes the uneducated think that the subway is way shorter.
yet no mention of time differences between both methods including transfer time to get downtown.
If people cared about travel time to downtown, they'd vote down both the subway and LRT and put the $1.4B into GO service with 5 minute frequencies from Agincourt to Union.
$1.4B will subsidize run hundreds of thousands of trains runs and build large bus stations at Agincourt and Kennedy stations for all TTC bus traffic.
my comment was aimed at the fact that transfers incur huge penalties for transit users in models. I'd be interested to know if a mention of a transfer was made during the survey.
A faster run-time to Union Station. If you take the Yonge subway in rush-hour, almost everyone who was on at Yonge, has gotten off before Union. And of those that remain, many continue around the loop to St. Andrew and Osgoode.Frequent GO service + bus terminals at Agincourt/Kennedy would eliminate 2 transfers, not just one, and has a faster run-time to downtown.
A faster run-time to Union Station. If you take the Yonge subway in rush-hour, almost everyone who was on at Yonge, has gotten off before Union. And of those that remain, many continue around the loop to St. Andrew and Osgoode.
If you move the Kennedy->downtown demand to GO, most people coming off the GO from Agincourt will be trying to head north somehow. And it can easily be 5 minutes from the time the train stops until you walk into the subway station, let alone get on a subway train.
Could simply be who one asked.It would be nice to know the exact question they asked.
If the public opinion, even within Scarborough, is genuinely in favor of LRT, that is one thing. But a huge swing in public opinion from just a year ago seems strange, and makes me think that the question they asked has changed materially.