Jonny5
Senior Member
I don’t understand the logic of the provincial government at times. Look at the many highway options just south of us in New York. Yes it is in a completely different country, but the traffic flow of the many different highways are impressive, even just north of the big city itself, where you would have 2 or 3 parallel highways running next to each other to keep the overall traffic flow. Imagine if the 427, 400, and 404 all got extended further north connected to Highway 11, which would be upgraded and fixed to 400 series standards. Then this route would connect us with a twinned 417/17, running from Winnipeg to the Quebec border, giving Northern and Eastern Ontario a complete transportation link, and a half relief off the 401.
I don't want anything to do with the highways in New York State. They may look impressive on maps, but to drive on them is another story. You will find many are dilapidated, beyond a point I have rarely, or sometimes never seen in Ontario. And that's all over the state. I haven't been there since 2019, but for obvious reasons I don't think much improved in 2020. The infrastructure in Upstate New York through to the fringes of NYC all seemed to be falling apart, and I mean visibly falling apart. Everything concrete and asphalt had chunks missing, and big cracks all over. They are massively in debt too, and literally can't afford to pay the upkeep so some of those expressways have permanent lane closures simply because they can't pay to repave the whole road, only half of it. They just walled off one or two lanes on each side and let them go derelict!
New York is broke. They have layered debt and hidden it among dozens of agencies and regions so it doesn't all fall into that pesky "sub-sovereign" category people in Ontario obsess over. It really shows much better off we are even with that "unthinkable" debt.
Last edited: