zang
Senior Member
And why shouldn't I? Both cost a lot of money to build and operate, and if either will ever recoup the massive investment that goes into their construction and operation, it won't be for decades.
Because one almost entirely benefits individuals with money, where the other stands to benefit everyone?
Show me low-income discounted car, gas and insurance rates. Instead, the cost of owning and operating a car just keeps increasing multitudes faster than inflation.
Hmm, did you miss the part where lots of GO bus routes also use the Gardiner? The GO bus is slow as molasses now when compared to the train, how much worse do you think it would be if there was no Gardiner and they had to navigate local roads? Your strategy is not only a big middle finger to car drivers, but also transit users who have to use these services.
Pfft. When I decided I was no longer going to drive every day, I took the GO bus. The GO drivers bypassed as much of the Gardiner as they could to take the Lakeshore or other routes, and almost invariably still got in on schedule.
As for who's giving the finger to GO riders, it's the single-occupant vehicles that clog roadways.
Drivers always try and appeal using people other than themselves, whether it's transit, commercial vehicles, emergency vehicles. Yet undeniably, the problem of the overwhelming amount of traffic exists because far too many people choose to drive by themselves in a car. Every last one of them contributes, yet every last one of them thinks they're special and don't.
Just like every other piece of infrastructure ever built, you mean? Infrastructure requires maintenance. Duh.
"The money to built the necessary transit has to come from somewhere"? The yearly cost of maintaining the Gardiner and DVP together, separate from its once-in-a-generation rehab program, is $16 million dollars. With that kind of cost savings, you might buy a few extra Flexity cars.
"Excluding all the money that's been explicitly stated by the city and province rebuild the Gardiner to a state of good repair, maintenance is cheap!"
Not sure what that leaves other than street cleaning and line painting.
Proper maintenance has been put off for decades. Don't kid yourself that it's only $16m. The Gardiner has also had several waves of extensive repairs since the 1990s. It's not "once in a generation" by any stretch of the imagination.
The money to build the necessary transit has to come from somewhere, but it's not going to be from eliminating one highway. That money will evaporate faster than you can say vapourware GO expansion.
Luckily, Toronto has been relieved of the burden of maintaining the Gardiner, and therefore of the rights to decide about what to do about a critical piece of infrastructure for the suburban communities. It is the only smart thing Doug Ford has ever done in his tenure.
I assure you, Doug Ford had little choice in the matter.
They are, but those people made the choice to live far away from the city's core, and therefore they must deal with the fallout of their actions. Right?
Don't conflate the GTA and Toronto. If you live in a different tax region, why should you get a say as to where my taxes as a Torontonian get spent?
What someone can theoretically do, and what someone will do, are often two planets apart. For what possible reason has our leadership not expanded the Milton service already? Why must they wait until a major highway is torn down before (theoretically) taking steps to make this happen? It could have been done decades ago, but wasn't.
Because ironically, the areas that would benefit most from GO expansion vote in the people least likely to want to meaningfully expand the system. This isn't rocket science.
Milton just voted in Zee Hamid, unsurprisingly. Toronto has never had the power to stop the GTA from voting conservative.
And when the 427 ends at where the Gardiner is presently... then what? That traffic gets funneled out onto local roads, as I already said
That's what happens with every single highway already. They all funnel out onto local roads sooner or later…
Both of these are lazy ad hominem attacks, which doesn't surprise me, because the anti-car folk are absolutely horrendous at spreading their cause.
All this lecturing on lazy ad hominem attacks without a lick of self-awareness.
"I don't know if you have ever bothered to step foot outside of Toronto - based on your comments, I would be shocked to find out you have"
Regardless...
if you are trying to achieve something, instead of just the savage vengeance that comes with attacking someone you view as an ideological opponent, you have to try to meet them in the middle and understand where they're coming from […]
We've had carpooling programs in this province since the 1970s. Yet a measly 12% of commuters do so. Why is that exactly?
How many decades have drivers had to come to the middle and understand the public transit needs of the city? We watched for decades as governments voted in by the GTA or car-centric suburbs kick transit forward years, or worse, downright cancel them. We've seen every attempt (many successful) from drivers as to why X LRT, grade separated streetcar or bike lane shouldn't be allowed.
Sorry, the time for diplomacy with drivers has long passed. Drivers have held all the card for a very, very long time.
[…] and see how you two can both work together towards a compromise that doesn't actively fuck over the other side.
But does it really fuck over the other side?
1) There's already a multi-lane stroad running parallel to the Gardiner.
2) The Gardiner accounts for a whole whopping 11% of the total commuter traffic into the city.
3) People find other ways.
So unless you're one of the drivers who'll just stamp your feet and complain the whole time, it'll likely be a minor inconvenience to overcome in some way or another. If your drive takes as long as transit, why not then take transit?
But it does cause major problems for them trying to access that job. Let's be clear, having to commute an hour one way on a daily basis is plenty bad enough; every minute spent commuting is time you can be spending with family, friends, on hobbies. Right now, turning from the 427 to local roads can easily lengthen a commute by 20-25 minutes - now how bad is it going to be if any significant portion of the 905 is going to be doing it?
And yet, drivers don't appreciate the rules of the King St. pilot enough to respect transit that makes other people's commutes faster.
Commuter driving comes with huge portions of added entitlement and selfishness.
So then you know the struggle, but now that you are no longer in that struggle you are content to let other people suffer on the basis that maybe our insipid leadership will wake up and smell the horseshit and make better transit connections to far flung areas of the GTA? That's even worse.
Again, that money comes from where? Are the GTA cities and their taxpayers willing to shoulder the burden of that cost out of respect for the decades that the City of Toronto paid for the expressway that made their lives easier?
And if I don't want to be a trucker??? That's a difficult job, it requires much concentration and responsibility for a big part of the day, and it often means strange hours and maybe even many days in a row spent away from home. Luckily, the beauty of a democratic country is that I'm allowed to look elsewhere for employment, and I'm not required to do whatever it is that my town offers.
For someone so bent on lecturing about free will and democracy, you don't seem overly willing to take responsibility for your own personal choices.
Why? Please explain, at length, this distinction.
Because moving between cities is different than traversing a highway that exists strictly to get deeper into that city. It's not that hard and doesn't need to be long.
Why on God's earth would I think that? It's less than a 5 minute drive from Martin and 401 to Martin and Main. What kind of an absurd strawman is this?
And yet, we built an expressway right overtop of an already existing throughway to make one out of nine commuter's lives easier. Being a driver does not mean you deserve priority and the fastest route.