Also, source on the "slower than a bus" claim? Considering we have no LRT lines currently in operation in the city, this sounds again like cheap politicking. How on God's earth can an LRT in its own lane be slower than a bus that runs in mixed traffic? The very idea defies logic.
In theory it can, if the operational rules are twisted that way. If one sets a lower limit on LRT speed compared to the street / bus speed, plus requires it to stop-and-proceed at every switch / crossover, etc.
I am not saying that will happen. In fact I hope the common sense prevails and the LRT runs somewhat faster than the bus it replaces.
Can't wait for the Finch line to open, it will be a great opportunity to test the theories - and perhaps improve the operational practices if the Day 1 performance disappoints.
Waterloo has an LRT, and depending on the trip and time of day it can absolutely be slower or at least not faster than the #7 bus, which is a local bus making over 3x more stops and with much worse signal priority. I'm not even talking about Conestoga to Fairway or similar OD pairs where the LRT takes a much more indirect route, but OD pairs for which both take more or less the same route.
Some examples, taken from the current published timetables:
Central -> Waterloo Public Square (both the bus and LRT travel entirely along King St for this segment)
LRT: 7 minutes, regardless of time of day:
#7 bus: 7 minutes during early morning and evening, 8-9 minutes midday and peak
Borden -> Waterloo Public Square (this includes the segment through Downtown Kitchener)
LRT: 17 minutes
#7 bus: King/Ottawa to Waterloo Public Square (a slightly longer journey), 15-21 minutes depending on time of day
And this is the local bus! Before the Ion there was the limited stop #200 bus, making similar stops to the LRT today. I think it is pretty clear that the LRT did not deliver significant travel time improvements and definitely led to slower journeys in some cases.
Signal priority on the Ion is excellent, but there's slow speed limits, numerous sharp turns with even slower speed limits, slow acceleration, etc. I think speed limits need to be set faster on LRTs than the street to improve upon off-peak buses, because bus drivers often drive faster than the speed limit but LRT operations are a lot more strict (at least in Waterloo). LRVs also just accelerate and brake slower than buses.