Sunnyside
Active Member
I think it would be worthwhile if members discussed what the 'next phase' projects will actually be, and how RapidTO fits into that timeline. We know the 'current phase' goes to 2031, including stuff like GO Expansion, YNSE, HaLRT, HuLRT, Finch, Eg, the three BRTs and any other subway projects besides Sheppard. The question is what will be getting moved forward next; Steeles is certainly on the table, so is Finch East, OL North and plenty more. Depending on what projects are moving forward as BRT, more could be on the table, too; Hamilton's A-Line, Simcoe St, even Trafalgar could be where the province is eyeing expansion.If it wasn’t for the Liberals delaying the Toronto LRTs and posturing to the Toronto city council idiotic debates we would have gotten most of Transit City already built by now. Finch was delayed by 5 years. Scarborough was a mess because there was no vision from the province.
Doug got the subway building. Yes it’s over built but it’s better than the ridiculous 1 stop the city had. The 4 priority projects for Ford are all funded and under construction which will make them harder to cancel later. Also Ontario Line is a much better solution than what the city had, which was a short stub that did nothing beyond Yonge line relief downtown.
I just wish we had the first wave open already - Line 5 and 6. Hoping 2024 will be the lucky year.
Steeles RT will hopefully start to be debated in 10 years once Line 1 Yonge north extension is near opening and Steeles will need better bus service. Until then nothing will happen.
Eglinton East and the RapidTO corridors put some of the 416-oriented assumptions into question. I don't know how that overlaps w/provincial plans. I am also curious whether OL/407 RT will start taking priority over other things. In my opinion, I would actually be ok with this as a long term direction, as the envisioned system would deliver much greater benefits to the entire region than any piecemeal LRT projects in the interim. The motif seems to be speed and quantity.
In any case, something tells me Metrolinx's 2051 RTP update is going to have new corridors to consider, even for the short term. COVID definitely has changed travel patterns, and some far-out 905 corridors that facilitate circumferential trips before might need more attention than pre-2020 indicated. Steeles' BRT might have to extend further west all the way to Brampton now rather than merely a 'priority bus corridor'.