asey20
New Member
Car drivers still pay for operational costs. Transit riders should pay a reasonable amount to subsidize operational costs.I don't think it needs to break even either. We never have the expectations for roads to break even.
Car drivers still pay for operational costs. Transit riders should pay a reasonable amount to subsidize operational costs.I don't think it needs to break even either. We never have the expectations for roads to break even.
I don't think it needs to break even either. We never have the expectations for roads to break even.
That's a shame. Regular GO fares remain terribly expensive compared to driving from my end of the GTA, more so once I add a travel companion or two.GO has sneakily removed the $15 weekend pass from their website. That's too bad...sometimes I'd get the weekend pass even though I only needed a day pass, so that I could go to more places on the 2nd/3rd day.
Weekend Passes with GO
Travelling on a weekend? Buy your $10 One-Day Weekend travel pass now!www.gotransit.com
Taxpayers subsidise so many offensive wastes of money, I'm not sure a tourist train should be anywhere near the top of the list of things to be upset about.Yes but taxpayers should not be subsidizing tourism to Niagara Falls. Unfortunately as many of us know that train is overloaded with people that the Falls cannot easily support.
They're already subsidizing tourism to Niagara Falls via car. Why should it not be subsidized via train?Yes but taxpayers should not be subsidizing tourism to Niagara Falls. Unfortunately as many of us know that train is overloaded with people that the Falls cannot easily support.
Yes but taxpayers should not be subsidizing tourism to Niagara Falls. Unfortunately as many of us know that train is overloaded with people that the Falls cannot easily support.
The $40 yearly Niagara Parks parking pass is also one hell of a subsidy.As soon as there are tolls on the QEW, you will have a point.
Level playing field.
The $40 yearly Niagara Parks parking pass is also one hell of a subsidy.
The question is not whether transit should be subsidized. The question is whether the best use of transit subsidies is to provide absurdly cheap weekend getaways to Niagara Falls, rather than making GO Transit actually affordable for travel within the GTA and for travel between cities near each other, like Kitchener and Guelph.
The issue is the use of a flat rate regardless of distance. $10 for a 260 km round trip from Toronto to Niagara Falls is $0.04/km, which is absurdly cheap. $10 for a 34 km round trip from Downsview Park to Union is $0.29/km, which is just as expensive per km as driving your own personal vehicle (excluding parking).
Sure, if the Ministry of Tourism wants to subsidize Niagara trips from their own budget that's wonderful, as long as that subsidy actually gets used to address the catastrophic overcrowding that WEGO faces everytime a train dumps 1700 people at Niagara Falls station. For example, trains to Niagara should be limited to 8 coaches max, and to provide the necessary capacity during the summer additional round trips will be required (notably a second trip from Toronto to NF in the morning).Essentially agree with you; though would add........
I think it depends on which budget the Niagara subsidy comes from; if it comes from the Ministry of Tourism, then I think that works fine.
Its a comparatively cheap investment in total dollars, and the spin off in sales tax revenue and/or casino earnings, on average, more than covers that cost.
The question of weekday commutes is irrelevant to the discussion of a weekend day pass.By contrast, a weekday commute, in most cases, occurs whether or not the fare is reasonable; which means there is not the same net economic spinoff and revenue recovery.
Of course, this is not entirely true, as expensive daily commutes can determine where people live and what jobs they obtain, and therefore can carry benefits and consequences both personal and social. These, however, are probably more challenging to measure.
Sure, if the Ministry of Tourism wants to subsidize Niagara trips from their own budget that's wonderful, as long as that subsidy actually gets used to address the catastrophic overcrowding that WEGO faces everytime a train dumps 1700 people at Niagara Falls station. For example, trains to Niagara should be limited to 8 coaches max, and to provide the necessary capacity during the summer additional round trips will be required (notably a second trip from Toronto to NF in the morning).
The question of weekday commutes is irrelevant to the discussion of a weekend day pass.
And I'm pointing out that trips within the GTA are not 'commuter routes' on the weekend, they have a major recreational function just like the trip to Niagara Falls. People head to downtown Toronto to see sports games, theatres, go shopping, visit friends, go to the pub, etc.I was specifically addressing your comparison to a less subsidized, shorter, 'commuter route' as alternative way to spend subsidy.
And again, I agree with you; I was simply pointing out that the specific benefit lowering the cost of that alternate route may harder to define. (hotel occupancy, and retail sales in NF are by comparison easy to quantify)
And I'm pointing out that trips within the GTA are not 'commuter routes' on the weekend, they have a major recreational function just like the trip to Niagara Falls. People head to downtown Toronto to see sports games, theatres, go shopping, visit friends, go to the pub, etc.
First of all they made it mandatory to use the passes 7 days from when you purchased it, to now doing this.GO has sneakily removed the $15 weekend pass from their website. That's too bad...sometimes I'd get the weekend pass even though I only needed a day pass, so that I could go to more places on the 2nd/3rd day.
Weekend Passes with GO
Travelling on a weekend? Buy your $10 One-Day Weekend travel pass now!www.gotransit.com