TheTigerMaster
Superstar
There is a real fear from inner suburban residents that they will be taxed to fund the Downtown and I cant blame them
That's a pretty ridiculous concern to be have, given that Toronto/East York and North York generate the bulk of tax revenue in the city. If this is their concern, then maybe tax revenue should only be spent in the boroughs where they're generated. Of course, this would be highly beneficial to Downtown residents, who generate 25% of property tax revenues and 50% of GDP despite occupying 3% of Toronto's land mass (note that this is a stupid idea that I don't at all support)
It's just pretty absurd to be concerned about that when over the decades the inner suburbs (mainly Scarborough and Etobicoke) have collectively had billions of dollars (if not tens of billions of dollars) in funding pumped into them from other areas of the city.
Even if you want to look at just transit investments, the last time Toronto/East York had major transit investment was the late 50s and early 60s. All the funding since then has been focused on the suburbs.
Toronto's suburbs are getting some 25 km of new subways being delivered right now (TYSSE, SSE, ECLRT). Council just endorsed a plan that will have another 14 km of suburban subways delivered over the coming decades, in addition to the 25 km already in delivery. There are only 12 km of downtown subways proposed, after more than 50 years of no Downtown expansion. So these fears seem pretty unfounded to me. They're not based in any kind of historical precedent, and there aren't even plans to build a disproportionate amount of transit Downtown in the future
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