reaperexpress
Senior Member
And there's still not enough attention being paid to station access. It doesn't matter how frequently trains run when the parking is full and the local bus sucks. NB: This is not to be misconstrued as advocating for more station parking--we need massively improved local bus service to as many GO stations as possible.
YRT deserves special shame in this department. There has been all-day service on the Barrie line since 2017 and I don't think they have a single bus that is timed to meet a GO train. In fact they eliminated the old peak-period GO Shuttle routes which were timed based on GO trains and never replaced them with full service routes. Connecting to GO is the one situation where YRT could actually generate fairly substantial ridership despite their abysmal frequencies, given that the train only runs once per hour anyway so everyone wants to go to the station at the same time each hour (or potentially two times each hour if there is demand for the trains in both directions).
For example:
Route 54 Bayview North (from Yonge & Wellington in Aurora to East Gwillimbury Station via Bayview) could potentially be a useful way to get to/from the hourly train service, except that it only runs roughly every 65 minutes on Saturdays and every 70 minutes on Weekdays off-peak, and it doesn't run at all on Sundays.
Route 33 runs along past Aurora station roughly every 35 minutes but because it's not a clockface schedule there is no correlation with the GO Train arrivals.
Route 26 runs from Maple station to the neighbourhoods to the northwest during weekday peak periods, but since it runs roughly every 50 minutes while trains run every 30, it does not match up with train arrivals.
As another demonstration of how little effort YRT makes to serve GO stations, they don't even show the stations on the interactive map that is now the only way of finding schedules. Here's whwere Aurora GO station should be:
A large part of the reason that the TTC bus network is so well used is that it is set up to conveniently bring people to and from subway stations. Local buses may not be that attractive on their own but the subway often is and that last-mile ridership can provide a baseline to support higher frequencies which in turn attract more ridership that isn't heading to/from the station. YRT should be setting up routes with clockface schedules to/from GO train stations to start building ridership.