crs1026
Superstar
Thank you for the very informative post about what has been delayed for the immediate future, and I think that you have provided a great deal of insight into some of the reason why GO is only marginally more of a viable urban connector this decade than 2 or 6 decades previous. However, I am going to be that forumer and point out again that I am observing that GO has not had reasonably steady progress, with regards to: dedicated trackage, track duplication, level boarding, station amenities, TOD, electrification, above all - regular 2WAD services, everything, really. Rather, the progress that it is happening of late doesn't make up for Toronto's 120 year long rail history.
All these years later in 2018, GO is still attempting to impress upon stations built in dirt fields, surrounded by nothing but giant parking lots, single track extensions with peak period-only service hauled by diesel locomotives into the distant future for some reason despite Ontario's cheap and clean hydroelectricity (it is, by global standards, still very cheap), and I am saying that I don't think it has to be this way. What I have noticed is that there tend to be two types of forumers, the idealist ones like myself (i.e. "Why do most wealthy overseas cities have train systems that make ours look like crap? Let's build ours better now - here's how!") and the well-informed ones who reverse-engineer the current situation to try to make sense of it (i.e. "Toronto is built on a unique combination of silty sand and bedrock that *no* other city has ever had to deal with! No government could ever have conceived of legislating a better deal with CN and CP or providing adequate transit funding because there are so many systems in place etc etc!").
To take the long view on this - GO was traditionally a very innovative organization and its original "old guard" built a basic system from scratch that had leapfrogged over many systems. If you compare GO in 1984 to the state of commuter operations in Chicago or on the Northeast corridor of that era, GO was the renowned leader. When California decided to enter the field, they copied GO to the letter. (eg - when Metrolink bought its first locomotives, they told EMD they wanted the *exact* product that GO had in its F59's, which were designed in-house by GO. So exact, that the California units were delivered with anti-icing trace lines just as GO locomotives have.)
This stalled around 1990 because a) those old heads, many of whom had successful railroad careers before coming to GO, died off or retired, and b) the politicians halted all advances, and c) a group of newer staff without the original mindset took over. It has further stalled because d) the even newer staff recruited to ML have little or no prior experience in rail commuter operations - lots of straight out of school types and people from academic or consulting ivory towers.
If you compare GO as it was on the day that Bob Rae became Premier, to where it stands today, it has certainly progressed, but those 25ish years have a lot of slow plodding in them, especially while Rae and Harris were in place.
The Liberal regime has brought funding but not otherwise been helpful to GO because of its lack of transparency and accountability, and because the Libs fundamentally are prone to unfounded self promotion. Lack of results focus and the ability to explain away failure (or just hide it) abounds.
However, if you chart the capital spending over the last 15 years, it's not such a bad story. Acquiring the ex CN lines took a lot of cash. Building Willowbrook and Whitby and Don yard, and the outlying layover yards, did also. There has been a lot of grade separation done. Lakeshore had a triple track added Aldershot-Port Credit and Don - Scarborough Jct. Barrie was reopened and it and Stouffville got CTC. GTS, while it didn't achieve its end goal, is a huge upgrade. And Union Station while ongoing has seen lots of upgrading. The fleet keeps growing. To have expected more would have assumed that money grows on trees. (Side Note to Premier Wynne: it doesn't.)
One thing that has never wavered is state of good repair. Try riding a GO bilevel in LA some time.... they are threadbare. Except after concerts when the kids are all drunk, you can eat off the floor on a GO train.
So, yeah, I wish we had remained world leader from start to finish, but overall there are positives. Let's not feel we have to beat ourselves up, let's just keep the catchup process going.
- Paul
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