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Your comment about overall congestion city wide is silly. Of course if one were to remove bike lanes on Yonge St., it would not have an impact to traffic on Kennedy Rd., but it will have an impact on Yonge St.
It's not silly if the purpose of Bill 212 is to reduce congestion.
As it stands, Bill 212 will literally accomplish nothing to help congestion.
Not even counting the 401, DVP, Gardiner, 404, which are the worst spots - let's look at Toronto's busiest intersections.
Here is a list of the 10 Toronto intersections with the most traffic congestion in 2022:
1. Lake Shore Boulevard East & Lower Sherbourne Street
2. Finch Avenue West & Norfinch Drive/Oakdale Road
3. Finch Avenue West & 400 South Finch Westbound Ramp
4. Finch Avenue West & 400 North Finch Eastbound Ramp
5. Finch Avenue West & Signet Drive/Arrow Road
6. Lawrence Avenue East & Scarborough Golf Club Road
7. Lake Shore Boulevard East & Bay Street
8. Steeles Avenue East & Pharmacy Avenue/ Esna Park Drive
9. Islington Avenue & Finch Avenue West
10. Lake Shore Boulevard East & Parliament Street
You know what is not on any of them? Bike Lanes. (Exception of Bay & Sherbourne but those bike lanes did NOT remove a lane of traffic since the road is too narrow). Congestion here is called by cars merging into the one lane that goes onto the Gardiner. Nothing to do with cycling.
So again where is the ROI on spending tens of millions and putting streets back into construction for months? There's no benefit.