nstuch
Active Member
Couldn’t there be 2 or 3 crews simultaneously doing the demo, and another one starting the replacement at the same time? Seems like the current situation is a pretty skeleton crew.
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Not as much as you'd think. A lot of folks are choosing to still drive along the QEW during the Gardiner construction. Most of them are aware of the GO train. The main complaint being is there isn't enough parking at the GO stations once you pass Clarkson. Port Credit has little parking due to construction of the LRT. Long branch's parking lot is tiny and is pretty much all reserved spots. Mimico is full by 7am. Go by Mimico on Monday and you'll see everybody parked on the sides of the road cause they couldn't find a parking spot.I do wonder sometimes if the city had worked with Metrolinx to somehow ensure 15-minute GO service on the Lakeshore West line between Union and Long Branch, all day, every-day could have helped here too.
That area was to be part of the GO Station redevelopment with parking underground until the developer went under. A new plan surface with a new developer and looks like they are. going under. ML wants a developer to help with the the redevelopment and making it accessible that cannot happen today, consider next year is the drop dead date. Since this is a province thing, the province can change that date for ML to what every date ML needs to make it happen.Not as much as you'd think. A lot of folks are choosing to still drive along the QEW during the Gardiner construction. Most of them are aware of the GO train. The main complaint being is there isn't enough parking at the GO stations once you pass Clarkson. Port Credit has little parking due to construction of the LRT. Long branch's parking lot is tiny and is pretty much all reserved spots. Mimico is full by 7am. Go by Mimico on Monday and you'll see everybody parked on the sides of the road cause they couldn't find a parking spot.
I proposed Metrolinx should temporarily expand parking at Mimico until the Gardiner construction is done. But was swiftly shut down by the "urban puritans" of this forum.
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Reddit is bombarded with idiots screaming whY DiDn'T YOU tAKe tHE Go (ignoring the fact not everyone is going to union and the entire city of Toronto west of Scarborough has something like 30 unreserved spots on the lakeshore line.Not as much as you'd think. A lot of folks are choosing to still drive along the QEW during the Gardiner construction. Most of them are aware of the GO train. The main complaint being is there isn't enough parking at the GO stations once you pass Clarkson. Port Credit has little parking due to construction of the LRT. Long branch's parking lot is tiny and is pretty much all reserved spots. Mimico is full by 7am. Go by Mimico on Monday and you'll see everybody parked on the sides of the road cause they couldn't find a parking spot.
I proposed Metrolinx should temporarily expand parking at Mimico until the Gardiner construction is done. But was swiftly shut down by the "urban puritans" of this forum.
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The quality of discussion is a lot higher here! My biggest gripe is a lot of people hand wave away problems. I took the GO during active TO and missed a train by 2 mins (my bad I'll wait for the next in an hour) well the train an hour later was cancelled due to a trespasser, no replacement sent etc. So that 15 min trip to union took over 2 hours. The go is great until there is any sort of problem, or you're going somewhere that isn't union.Most people here don't scream about anything. We have very reasoned discussion! Most of us frankly don't care that much if someone who chose to move out to Oakville takes 2 hours to drive to Toronto. Though there's obviously a simple solution to the problem, which is a toll or congestion charge, but nobody who lives in Oakville seems to want a fast drive enough to actually pay what it costs.
We do often make the helpful suggestion that if you hate spending two hours in traffic, there's a pretty convenient train that lands you close to a lot of destinations in Toronto, and right on the subway line. I guess everyone has their reasons as to why two hours in traffic is better than finding a way to make the train work (bike to the station? Taxi/Uber? Have someone drop you off?), which is up to them.
The solution to not enough parking is also simple. Clearly they don't charge enough.
Most people here don't scream about anything. We have very reasoned discussion! Most of us frankly don't care that much if someone who chose to move out to Oakville takes 2 hours to drive to Toronto. Though there's obviously a simple solution to the problem, which is a toll or congestion charge, but nobody who lives in Oakville seems to want a fast drive enough to actually pay what it costs.
We do often make the helpful suggestion that if you hate spending two hours in traffic, there's a pretty convenient train that lands you close to a lot of destinations in Toronto, and right on the subway line. I guess everyone has their reasons as to why two hours in traffic is better than finding a way to make the train work (bike to the station? Taxi/Uber? Have someone drop you off?), which is up to them.
The solution to not enough parking is also simple. Clearly they don't charge enough.
The "gas tax" is the charge that drivers pay to fund the road infrastructure they drive on. Every time a driver fills up their car, they're funding the infrastructure their automobile relies on. Not to derail this thread, but this is why governments are now trying to figure out another type of "gas tax" for EV's.Though there's obviously a simple solution to the problem, which is a toll or congestion charge, but nobody who lives in Oakville seems to want a fast drive enough to actually pay what it costs.
Honestly, I’ve seen a deterioration in how people act in public (can you find a single bus, train car, or McDonald’s somebody isn’t playing Instagram out loud?) I think if we lower the attitude things like townhomes condos would be seen in a lot better light!The "gas tax" is the charge that drivers pay to fund the road infrastructure they drive on. Every time a driver fills up their car, they're funding the infrastructure their automobile relies on. Not to derail this thread, but this is why governments are now trying to figure out another type of "gas tax" for EV's.
Also I' m not sure why you're going after Oakville people. People in Oakville are generally good at taking the train into work. Even the wealthy ones. I've seen my fair share of Maserati's in their reserved parking spots. My comments regarding lack of parking was for people who live east of Port Credit.
My suggestion to increase parking at Mimico, was only a temporary solution until construction on the Gardiner is complete. Afterwards we go back to the original plan to construct condos right next to the station.
If temporarily constructing a couple more parking spots encourages more drivers to ride the GO train, then I say it's worth it. You have to get yourself in the mindset of these people. Unfortunately you need to make taking the train as convenient as possible for them. Otherwise they won't get out of their car. Which means ensuring theirs a parking spot available for them on a weekday morning. Maybe after a year or two of riding the GO train, they'll start considering changing their lifestyle? Move closer to transit, etc.
You have to meet people in the middle. Don't just tell them to ride a bike. Otherwise they'll just double down on their destructive lifestyle.
Things like "transit" and "walkable neighbourhoods" take a collective effort. So does driving on the highway and hoping every other driver respects the rules of the road. I don't know why their seems to be a spike in anti-social behaviour as of late. It definitely has gotten worst post-covid. I try to champion things like taking transit and living in denser neighbourhoods. But unfortunately all it takes is a few people to ruin it for everybody.Honestly, I’ve seen a deterioration in how people act in public (can you find a single bus, train car, or McDonald’s somebody isn’t playing Instagram out loud?) I think if we lower the attitude things like townhomes condos would be seen in a lot better light!
Yeah I was in one of the "worst" Neighbourhoods in Japan Nishinari, barred windows everywhere etc. The worst behaviour I saw was a ticketed and ilegally parked car. Japan is insane, no talking on the trains, all the airbnb's I stayed at were silent even though the walls were so thin I could hear hear someone cough. Contrast this to the townhouse I live in where my neighbours play music so loud I can hear it showering but the board and 311 don't care!Things like "transit" and "walkable neighbourhoods" take a collective effort. So does driving on the highway and hoping every other driver respects the rules of the road. I don't know why their seems to be a spike in anti-social behaviour as of late. It definitely has gotten worst post-covid. I try to champion things like taking transit and living in denser neighbourhoods. But unfortunately all it takes is a few people to ruin it for everybody.
I often compare Canadian society to Japanese society. Transit and dense neighbourhoods are very successful in Japan. I theories it's because Japan is a "high-trust society". Look at Tokyo's metro and see how everyone respects the rules. Lining up on platforms before the train arrives, clean stations, no unruly behaviour from riders. I mean just look at what's considered a ghetto in Japan.