afransen
Senior Member
I think you are under the misapprehension that the Province expects bike lane removal to have any effect on congestion. The only point of the policy is to 1) be seen to be doing something, that sticks it to enemies of their base and 2) draw attention away from 212's actual purpose to advance highway 413.This is clearly a BIA that supports the bike lanes. That’s one. What of the other BIAs along the bike lanes? I’m a big fan and user of our bikes lanes, but you can’t just pick those who share our views.
What I’d like to see Mayor Chow do is ask the Premier for a year’s grace to reduce automobile congestion without removing the bike lanes. This will be achieved through the following….
We’d need the Premier to agree to support much of this both financially and legislatively.
- Reduce or eliminate construction-related lane closures.
- Sequence traffic signals to expedite rush hour flow
- Enact hardcore traffic enforcement to reduce block boxing and illegal parking/standing (consider to deputize citizenry with ticket bounty). Commercial trucks, shredding trucks, etc. seized for auction.
- Cancel all in-lane patios or other dine TO blockage. Nothing goes in the roadspace.
- Better control of signalized right turns so that pedestrians and cars flow better.
- Reduce or eliminate left turns unless there’s a dedicated left turn lane, especially on streetcar routes.
- As much as possible roadworks or utility work to be undertaken at night or weekends. Every roadwork project to be measured against its impact on congestion and how it can be avoided.
- Expand hours for no parking during rush hour from 3pm to 7pm, along with hardcore enforcement #3.
I fail to see how anything you describe helps with the province's actual aims.