I wish the city still had the “baseline schedule”, like they did for the early days of the VLSE project reports. I think that gives a better idea of whether MIP is behind or not.
and that is precisely why we don't have one, can't let the public know what's going on...
 
and that is precisely why we don't have one, can't let the public know what's going on...
Meh, I disagree. Both have their pros and cons. The independent certifier actually allows us to see how close we are to service commencement, but at such a distance to 2028, having it seems irrelevant.
 
Sad part when I think of it, is the area where west and south meet downtown has yet to be touched. I doubt that it's as simple as adding track.
I expect that entire section of road from 102 St -107 St will be closed during construction. Waiting until fall to close off the Avenue seems fine to me given the proximity to the Saturday Downtown Market.
 
Meh, I disagree. Both have their pros and cons. The independent certifier actually allows us to see how close we are to service commencement, but at such a distance to 2028, having it seems irrelevant.
yeah, we're too far out at this point...
 
If the public knows what's going on, the premier might decide to randomly cancel the project if there's any delay 🙄

It's not often I feel bad for Calgary, but the green line being cancelled is a tragedy
The only positive is that Edmonton is given a chance to catch up with the C-Train. Otherwise I feel bad that Calgary has received this major setback.
 
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Calgary has a leadership crisis imho.

Dreeshen said the province’s funding contribution was never a blank cheque, and called the truncated alignment approved by council on July 30 an “irresponsible waste of taxpayer dollars.”
“The province promised funding for a line servicing hundreds of thousands of Calgarians in southeast Calgary, not a stub line barely reaching out of downtown,” he wrote on X.
“Should the city change its mind and decide to build a Green Line that serves the needs of Calgary commuters, our provincial contribution remains on the table.

While council also expressed interest in transferring the Green Line’s management and financial risk to the Alberta government, Smith insisted the province has no intention of taking over the project.
“We want to be partners but we don’t want to take over the transit system,” she said. “We want to be able to fund a Green Line that was originally pitched to us, going out to Seton.
“It has to be integrated into Calgary city transit.”
 
The mess in Calgary can be partially blamed on lots of different people/entities. But the cancellation is square on the UCP.... there would have been a better option. $2.1b down the drain for absolutely nothing is just a travesty. And whatever route 'Frat Boy Dreeshen' dreams up will not go downtown and likely cost just as much, or more. Poor Calgary indeed
 
How much of the Green Line could they have gotten finished for $6.2 billion had they started in 2019 or even earlier? When were they shovel ready? This is a failure from Kenney to shelve the line, but could Notley's government have provided provincial funding earlier than election year and made sure the line was built?
 
The mess in Calgary can be partially blamed on lots of different people/entities. But the cancellation is square on the UCP.... there would have been a better option. $2.1b down the drain for absolutely nothing is just a travesty. And whatever route 'Frat Boy Dreeshen' dreams up will not go downtown and likely cost just as much, or more. Poor Calgary indeed
The Calgary Herald has an article documenting how their green line went off the rails. It goes back well over a decade and it's obvious that Calgary city council never had a clear idea of what the objective was. It started as a bus route, morphed into a LRT project going south, then north, then south again, then underground downtown, and in the mean time the cost kept escalating and the length of the line kept getting shorter and not servicing the people that it was originally intended to. Finally, the Province said enough is enough and pulled their funding and told the city to build it themselves which the city cannot do on its budget. A story of champagne tastes on a beer budget.
 
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