amnesiajune
Senior Member
I find this hard to believe. My friend comes from Oshawa/Pickering using GO every day and does not spend over $3000 on GO fares for the month. Now I guess you mean they need to pay a 2nf fare for TTC. I just finished reading the post more careful. WEll housing more ex0pensive in Toronto. Are we suppose to subsidize peoples' living expenses/costs?
That's for the year, not the month. A month of Go Transit fares from Pickering to Union is $280, which makes a year add up to nearly $3,400. Commuting from Oshawa to Union by train costs $4,300 per year.
Anyways, the point isn't to subsidize living expenses. The point is to lower the cost of public transit. There are a lot of people -- myself included -- who would have a very reasonable commute time by public transit, but choose to drive instead because transit is significantly slower but costs almost as much as driving. That's completely unacceptable. In my case, I'd be looking at $270/month for a 50 minute bus and subway ride, versus $300/month ($100 for gas, $120 for insurance, $80 on average for maintenance, free parking) for a 25 minute drive. Even if you average out the cost of my car over its lifespan, it's still a difference of less than $25/week to save nearly an hour of commuting time.
A lot of people are in a similar situation to mine. They can take a Go Train for their commute to work, but they don't because they'd have to pay an extra $120/month for a short bus ride from the train station to their workplace. Taking $60 off the cost of the commute makes it more likely that people will choose to take transit.