DonValleyRainbow
Senior Member
Correct we can champion lrts and drl. And make decisions to live close to transit
There has been market research that overwhelmingly points to a desire for people to live in dwellings close to rapid transit that was released sometime in the fall last year, IIRC.
But the culture war between low-density suburban living and medium/high density redevelopment rages on. Lobbyists for developers, that historically benefited from converting farm lands into sprawling suburban subdivisions, have been throwing potshots at the Greenbelt, the land use legislation that will encourage densification, and set the stage for efficient rapid transit. Then, as Lone Primate pointed out, there has been a deathly halt in rapid transit building (all three levels of governments share the blame for that), and this has pushed us to a point of deathly congestion, and situations where transit is too slow, crowded and uncomfortable for a car. And on top of it all, amalgamation. The death of Metro Toronto has ensured that proper infrastructure planning is morphed into an endless political fight, and gives relevance to the most extreme partisans.
So the gap between what we want and need, and what we actually get, is a canyon. This culture war is preventing us from closing that gap.