timio
Active Member
There's nothing wrong with the 30 bus. Except it's not a train. Although I typically sleep better on the bus, so not the end of the world.
Depends on the suburb. Mississauga, Brampton, Burlington/Hamilton, and most of the downtown areas of North York have no excuses to not run transit to and from the station during the early morning rush, and there should be no excuses during the midday (when transit is actually running). Even in Waterloo, the farthest location in the system, you can catch a bus from Conestoga mall and make 2 of the 4 early morning trains downtown. I still think they should extend the GO line to the Boardwalk in Waterloo because of all the available parking and transit connections. Oh well
I think people can, and do, come up with multitudes of ideas on why they do not take buses in the suburbs to the GO (well, most anything really) but that is hardly the point......every now and then this thread gets sidetracked with this parking discussion.......and people express the opinion that we should stop building parking and, instead, come up with a more sustainable solution to get people to, and onto, GO trains.....the discussion then evolves into people pointing out how bad the last mile transit is in the burbs....then I (and, to be fair, some others sometimes) point to examples (mine being Brampton) where there are lots of high frequency buses serving all the stations but the modal split for transit is still very low.....then someone (in this case you) points out that no one likes buses (or some paraphrase...in this case, it is too cold to wait for buses).......^reality is Canada has long and bitter winters. Compared with waiting for buses in the cold car is by far the preferred transportation mode.
....the point is, I think it is clear why GO sees future ridership growth being somewhat dependent on available parking spots
I think people can, and do, come up with multitudes of ideas on why they do not take buses in the suburbs to the GO . . .
...... you missed the step where someone (perhaps even this poster) suggests that ML can probably buy staff and operate a fleet of comfy, convenient small shuttle vehicles for less than the amortised per-space cost of building said parking spots, and how avoiding the fixed costs of maintaining a second family beater just to park it at GO all day is gravy to a commuter who might find said shuttle quite acceptable......
- Paul
There are not many of us around who have lived the experience of such small bus shuttles.....so when I confidently predict what the excuses will be for people not using them in great numbers people tend to scoff at me....... you missed the step where someone (perhaps even this poster) suggests that ML can probably buy staff and operate a fleet of comfy, convenient small shuttle vehicles for less than the amortised per-space cost of building said parking spots, and how avoiding the fixed costs of maintaining a second family beater just to park it at GO all day is gravy to a commuter who might find said shuttle quite acceptable......
- Paul
...... you missed the step where someone (perhaps even this poster) suggests that ML can probably buy staff and operate a fleet of comfy, convenient small shuttle vehicles for less than the amortised per-space cost of building said parking spots, and how avoiding the fixed costs of maintaining a second family beater just to park it at GO all day is gravy to a commuter who might find said shuttle quite acceptable......
York Region south of Davis as well. Peel, Halton and Durham have very good bus service to their go stations. The goal should be to increase transit share usage, as having a car is just too expensive.Depends on the suburb. Mississauga, Brampton, Burlington/Hamilton, and most of the downtown areas of North York have no excuses to not run transit to and from the station during the early morning rush, and there should be no excuses during the midday (when transit is actually running). Even in Waterloo, the farthest location in the system, you can catch a bus from Conestoga mall and make 2 of the 4 early morning trains downtown. I still think they should extend the GO line to the Boardwalk in Waterloo because of all the available parking and transit connections. Oh well.
Have you ever ridden the 30 bus?
I've long thought that Burlington has a lot of potential for a bike share system. I would love generally for Metrolinx to go ahead with a single bike share system for most of the GTA - instead of having multiple membership fees and structures, a single membership for various GTA bike share systems would be perfect.
Any of the old railway towns would work - Oakville, Burlington, Port Credit, Brampton, Weston, Unionville, Oshawa, Aurora, Newmarket, Barrie, Kitchener, Guelph, Etc., Etc., Etc.Agreed on both counts. Active Transportation and Transit are so closely linked, and I know that if my Presto card gave me instant access to bike share across the GTHA, I'd use it for the occasional ride wherever I may be. I'm not in TO enough to get a membership there or to bother creating an account, but if it was tap and go with Presto, I'd definitely use it to get from Union to somewhere in the northern section of downtown instead of riding the subway for a few stops.
Another area that instantly comes to mind is Port Credit. Set up a big hub at the station, and several hubs along the main strip. Bike to bar in less than 5 mins, as opposed to the 5-10 min walk (depending on where you're going relative to the station).
As for me in Burlington personally, I live about a 30 min walk from downtown. Just long enough to be a PITA. If there was a bike share in Burlington, I'd totally use it for the <10 min ride.