scarberiankhatru
Senior Member
Note that many TTC's bus routes, including Finch East and Jane, already have express / rocket branches. Although further expansion of rocket services is possible, I would not expect that to result in dramatic improvements of service.
No, they don't have Rocket service, they have some undifferentiated express branches that make some local stops. Putting a real Rocket route on Finch East or Jane, branding it as such, and letting the drivers actually drive faster than 10 km/hr would markedly improve service (which 190 drivers do and 39E drivers do not do). Capacity and ridership go up, travel times go down...and it costs effectively nothing.
This may be true in the US, but not here. Our history of subways, streetcars, and buses makes us different. I've asked many Torontonians this exact same question, and the majority simply do not care. I'm a railfan myself, so I know what bias is.
Aside from the fact that a much more varied demographic and socio-economic bunch of people take buses in Toronto, I'd bet real money that every study that has studied light rail vs buses has studied *real* light rail (probably grade-separated), and not streetcar ROWs. Apples to orangutans. No one will get out of their car for something that sits at red lights (they'd rather sit in their own car at red lights).
There is no equivalent way to study the two. As for Spadina, that comparison isn't fair, either - not unless the bus had an underground connection to the subway and clearly visible stop platforms. Bus ridership would go up if it had the little infrastructural tidbits LRT gets. Successful bus routes like Finch East should not be trashed because some people erroneous assume everyone would prefer to ride on rails (they really prefer features like faster travel and grade-separation).
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