khris
Senior Member
Yet another thread of Mississauga vs. Toronto. Ugh!
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Yet another thread of Mississauga vs. Toronto. Ugh!
The distance between Mississauga and Toronto? What distance? We share a border. The distance can range from 1 m to 30 km + so I don't see the big issue. Countless people commute from Toronto to work in Mississauga, more so than people commuting from Mississauga to Toronto (although there's many going that way as well).
This is absolute non-sense. I commute from one place to the other on a regular basis, and the GO Train is packed in the morning going to Toronto, empty the other way. Packed in the afternoon going to Sauga... empty in the other way. Same goes for the subway. Same goes for the QEW. I've used all 5 ways (Milton GO, Lakeshore GO, M. Transit + Subway, each of the 2 highways) to get from Sauga to Toronto time and time again, and it's always the same. People work downtown, go back home in Mississauga.
I like Mississauga. Lived there for 2 years and still visit frequently 'cause of my girlfriend. But I don't think it's a city at all - it's a huge cluster of suburbs that has grown so big it's starting to look for ways to shorten the distances travelled in an era of high petrol prices.
I see Mississauga as a satellite area of Toronto. Anyone coming from abroad does too. International students are always puzzled when they hear people say 'I'm from Mississauga' as opposed to 'I'm from Toronto' in spite of the fact the parents of most work downtown, children aspire to graduate from U of T, etc, etc.
I really hope this project livens up that area. I have a couple of friends living in the condos around there (which btw are so cheap for what you are getting) and they could do with some non-mall-oriented activities around there.
That means nothing ... we we're talking about it from a jobs perspective ... those trains are empty because for the most part everyone drives to work in Mississauga - and a good chunk of these people live elsewhere in the GTA ... this is the case for various reasons ... you can argue transit (getting to Mississauga) isn't easy but honestly even if it was I think we'd see a similar scenario ... it's where companies decide to locate in Mississauga and how there offices are setup - you just feel weird taking the bus to them even if you can, I'm being honest here!
If there was office development in MCC things would likely be better - particularly over time - but business aren't attracted to that area.
Anyway, from a purely numbers point of view Mississauga is hugely successful in attracting business ... not in an ideal manner at all ... in sprawling offices campuses ... but either way they're successful.
Also, doady, % with university degree really means nothing - in any city in North America and likely the world the vast majority of poorer people will live in the city proper as that's where all the services are clustered.
This is absolute non-sense. I commute from one place to the other on a regular basis, and the GO Train is packed in the morning going to Toronto, empty the other way. Packed in the afternoon going to Sauga... empty in the other way. Same goes for the subway. Same goes for the QEW. I've used all 5 ways (Milton GO, Lakeshore GO, M. Transit + Subway, each of the 2 highways) to get from Sauga to Toronto time and time again, and it's always the same. People work downtown, go back home in Mississauga.
I see Mississauga as a satellite area of Toronto. Anyone coming from abroad does too.
What does that have to do with Mississauga lack of talent? It seems to me that education Mississauga vs Toronto is an irrelevant issue. If Mississauga can be more educated, why does it matter if there a lack, if any, of education intituation in Mississauga? It doesn't seem to make any difference.
Did you read what I wrote? Not only are trains empty, highway lanes for CARS are empty as well. I live in a high-rise condo at Cityplace right now, and I can see the QEW from my window. There's no traffic at all leaving Toronto in the mornings, and there's no traffic at all coming to Toronto at this time and during the rest of the afternoon.
Right now, for example, all lanes going to Mississauga/Oakville are jammed and moving slowly. Cars in the opposite direction (coming to Toronto) are facing no traffic at all.
It's stupidly obvious that more people from Mississauga commute to work in Toronto than the other way around. I can't believe anyone is arguing that point for whatever reason.
A little research goes a long way...
"Long known as a bedroom community, Mississauga is now a thriving destination for rush-hour commuters. More people commute into the city for work, than out of the city, and most choose to commute to Mississauga in their cars - alone. This, combined with a growing population and employment base, has added to traffic congestion and increased levels of air pollution."
http://cms1.smartcommute.ca/mississauga/news_events/media_coverage
"The BRT is not simply a one-way commuting route into Toronto. In fact, many people are surprised to learn that more people actually commute into Mississauga for work each day than commute out to Toronto."
http://www.mississauga.ca/file/COM/Forum_Moving_People_Web.pdf
A little research goes a long way...
"Long known as a bedroom community, Mississauga is now a thriving destination for rush-hour commuters. More people commute into the city for work, than out of the city, and most choose to commute to Mississauga in their cars - alone. This, combined with a growing population and employment base, has added to traffic congestion and increased levels of air pollution."
http://cms1.smartcommute.ca/mississauga/news_events/media_coverage
"The BRT is not simply a one-way commuting route into Toronto. In fact, many people are surprised to learn that more people actually commute into Mississauga for work each day than commute out to Toronto."
http://www.mississauga.ca/file/COM/Forum_Moving_People_Web.pdf
As for your claims that GO is busier heading into Toronto in the morning and empty going into Mississauga... You are right. The lakeshore line is the only line that actually goes out to Mississauga though, and most of the jobs in Mississauga are nearly an hour from the nearest Lakeshore GO line by transit. You can't use GO trains on the Milton line to get into Mississauga for work in the morning, so your experiences must be made up!
The situation there is that the system is designed to allow users to go in the only direction in which traffic really flows. -> Toronto in the morning -> Mississauga evening. There's buses that run in the opposite direction, however... never seen them full.
The article you quoted says nothing regarding commuters from Toronto to Mississauga, it just says there's more overall commuters, which isn't surprising seeing as the area North of the 401 (which happens to belong to Mississauga) is flooded with workers from Milton, Brampton, and areas that are technically considered 'Toronto'.
I honestly can't believe people are even discussing this.
Here:
http://www.peelhaltonworkforce.com/uploads/Mississauga Mayors Job Summit - LMI.pdf
Happy? There's much more people commuting from Mississauga to Toronto than the other way around. Taking into account the huge numbers of people in Etobicoke that do business in Mississauga, I'd imagine the number of commuters coming from downtown's core to be even lower. (I don't know anyone from Mississauga who works in Etobicoke! But I've met many who do the other way around)
Now, if you want to see something interesting, take a look at this:
http://www12.statcan.gc.ca/census-r...WorkplaceResidence/TorontoPOW_PowPor_ec-1.pdf
As you can see, most of the 'employment' going on at the 'city of mississauga' is located North of the 401 in a commercial/industrial area where NO ONE lives (next to the airport), with no schools, no hospitals, no stores, no public squares, that exists there only because land is outrageously cheap due to low demand.
If you want to call those commuters from North Toronto and Brampton (both of which are actually closer to the airport and its surroundings than most people from Mississauga) commuters into the 'city of Mississauga', go ahead. To me all that area is anything but a city, and certainly owes very little of its existence to Mississauga happening to administer those lands.
Commuters from Mississauga to Toronto, on the other hand, usually head to actual functioning parts of a city.
P.S. My last comments were a side argument - please read the document I first posted so that you can see that more people go into Mississauga than the other way around.