Neutrino
Senior Member
I can already picture the turf wars over bike share integration a la fare integration.
That is the goal....but you can lead a horse to water but they won't necessarily drink!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.
Yes but it was said with a Bramalea accent
I can already picture the turf wars over bike share integration a la fare integration.
Golden days...
Not really.Golden days...
Not really golden days for transit, but true for Canada as a whole...Not really.
I think the indirect nature of this sort of transit solution is always going to be it's downfall.
Dial-a-bus was an interesting experiment in Bramalea to get youth interested in using transit (neat that the buses all met/trsf at the Bramalea City Centre and right outside the cinemas)........it established transit in what is now east Brampton and there may be a whole generation of folk who grew up there knowing that the bus is not an evil or uncool way to get around....heck, it may even be a contributing factor to why Brampton people seem much more ok with the bus than other suburbs.....who knows.Not really golden days for transit, but true for Canada as a whole...
but because it was a good thing in the 70s does not make it a good thing for now.........speaking solely about Brampton, if the sort of bus service we have now is not enough to have a major impact on the modal share in how people arrive at GO stations......a dial-a-bus/shuttle type service does not have a snowflake's chance in hell of doing that.
usually only a week or so before the service starts.Pardon my ignorance, but when do the revised GO schedules come out for the fall? I'm curious to see these rumoured service improvements that have been mentioned here.
Brampton is no different.....they moved to a, mostly, grid system a long time ago.....and, yes, there is a walk out of the curvy streets to the more main roads........and, yes, I fully understand that people use that as an excuse for not using the bus.....the one area that is different in Brampton (from what I read about other suburbs) is that we have increased bus frequency more than most (i have used the example that at the end of my 400m walk from my golf course home to the bus stop is a bus that runs every 7 - 8 minutes in peak) so the "missed the train" risk is much lower....I would also ad that if we are talking about getting ready for a ReR world of trains all day every day 15 minutes apart (or less) the "missed the GO" factor will diminish in importance anyway......I won’t analyze Brampton, but it’s my impression that in some other places around the GTA there is a dearth of bus routes that penetrate those sprawly curvy-streeted residential enclaves that the cars come out of. Many routes stick to the grid, meaning while there may be frequent buses in the area, the walking distance to the bus is (seen as) substantial, and the perceived risk of missing the bus and thus missing the GO is subjectively large. GO parkers seem to have their drive timed to the second, and not necessarily lots of buffer time at the GO built into the schedule. Not to mention it’s no fun to plod to the bus stop and wait in the cold/rain/heat. (I have done just that for decades, and enjoy the walk, so I don’t understand the mentality, but it does seem to be common!)
My hypotheses is that a service that comes to you at your home, and that collects you at the GO and promptly takes you directly to your neighbourhood, if not your door, may be needed to pry many out of their car. Sounds precious, but that may also be the prerequisite before pay for parking is politically sellable.
- Paul
Hmm really?^reality is Canada has long and bitter winters. Compared with waiting for buses in the cold car is by far the preferred transportation mode.