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"We want a subway line, but we don't want to pay for any of it."
Um, good luck with that.
Living in Toronto means you pay taxes for infrastructure in the entire city? Huh. Imagine that.It's more like
"We want a subway line, but don't want to keep paying for others unless we get our subway line that should have been completed decades ago"
I'm ridiculing the entitlement of the Councillor's constituents who are opposing the tax increase. You even said that they're calling it "our subway line", as if it's a reward for astounding service to the rest of the city or something. If suburban Scarborough residents only want to pay for "their" transit, then how can they expect the city west of Victoria Park to pay into it?
Do these same advocates promote redevelopment of their bungalow filled streets with denser forms of housing?Entitlement is those Politicians that have great transit infrastructure and subways relentlessly campaigning elections in their far away wards and telling the 'have not' areas what there transit should look like
There is nothing really entitled about this specific area of Scarborough requesting the subway extension get on the Citys priority list as it should have always been and also noting his constituents have little interest in paying for other areas with such lack of equity or respect. Fits in well with your spin on what was being said.
Any appetite for taxes certainly wont happen until the City builds better bridges. Were finally seeing some steps being made and adding the Sheppard subway as a priority would likely only help the entire City slowly start moving forward away from the very strong apathetic low tax vote that exists. If outside areas continue to fight to decide transit solutions and ridicule voters here, good luck. We've already seen clearly what can happen politically when this occurs
To be entirely fair, no one wants to lose their house, or even apartment, for the greater good of society. Just like when a bunch of people in the Annex got the Spadina expressway cancelled because they didn't want their homes demolished or their landscape changed, people in Scarborough don't want to lose their home to a construction site.Do these same advocates promote redevelopment of their bungalow filled streets with denser forms of housing?
The only entitlement that I see is the entitlement of residents in the low-density suburb of Scarborough expecting a level of municipal servicing akin to the highest density parts of Toronto, despite their lack of willingness to change the predominant built form of their neighbourhoods. As a result of amalgamation, Scarborough residents have already got a great deal, with the same level of municipal servicing as the rest of the city thanks to our single-tier system, without the density to really warrant it (meaning it's subsidized by the rest of the city).
Entitlement is those Politicians that have great transit infrastructure and subways relentlessly campaigning elections in their far away wards and telling the 'have not' areas what there transit should look like
The only entitlement that I see is the entitlement of residents in the low-density suburb of Scarborough expecting a level of municipal servicing akin to the highest density parts of Toronto, despite their lack of willingness to change the predominant built form of their neighbourhoods. As a result of amalgamation, Scarborough residents have already got a great deal, with the same level of municipal servicing as the rest of the city thanks to our single-tier system, without the density to really warrant it (meaning it's subsidized by the rest of the city).
But wouldn't you acknowledge that in fairness Miller/Perks others were advocating for a larger network of suburban LRTs even before they started talking about a DRL? Or are you putting more emphasis on the "should look like part". So you'll acknowledge they advocated for Finch, Jane, Don Mills, Sheppard, Scarborough-Malvern (Crosstown to Malvern, Eglinton East to Sheppard/Malvern, but the really issue is you don't like the technology.
It just feels too simplistic to say these downtown folks had no map, plan, or call for investment outside their areas.
Collection of maps below to visualize the distribution.