I'm not sure how long you've been in Hamilton, or how familiar you are with how city staff 'gather' public opinion (aka they direct the public towards their opinion -- look back to 1999 and the city logo competition).
So our Venn Diagrams do overlap a tiny bit after all!
Long enough to get a picture. (what many call the "Old Boys Club" mentality)
Stubborn enough to start early due diligence anyway.
This may not be the exact scenario, but one possible of many: I learned there are already people ready to remortgage their house for a share in a gondola (i.e. Gage-Mountain 500 meters). A whole gondola looks doable on just 10 house remortgages, a small group of local residential investors who are willing to pitch a remortgage in, to total up to capitalizing the gondola for a stake. This may bypass government funding and reduce opposition. The current trial ballon idea is within the 2020-2029 timeline a shovel-ready privately-studied gondola (far away from any competing transport corridors, e.g. A-Line, car accesses, etc, keeping gondola mostly insulated from public-funded competition for long enough to payoff gondola capital costs event ually).
I don't view gondolas in the same "transit" angle as LRT, in that gondolas are low-priced enough to be privately funded and run off both tourism & transit. If the city wants to build it themselves, then the city's further ahead than we thought. But I'd suspect we'd be in mutual agreement they're just studying for something too far out in the future. The gondola idea came to me later than the LRT, but it interests me immensely regardless whether it's private/public/combination funded. Realistically I see the private route occuring for the 1st Hamilton gondola, though.
Now say, circa 2021 or 2028 or 2029, after a healthily progressing HSR+LRT, a shovel-ready fully-privately-funded-studied gondola would be dangled as a carrot ("just sign and it happens in just 12 months" -- not that simple but the objective is to do as much work as we can, all the way to private studies, to the point of making as shovel-ready-as-possible) in front of the City for several consecutive administrations, until one bites. Obviously, all sorts of talk and negotiations would be needed with so many stakeholders, like NEC/HorizonUtilities/City/stakeholders/etc, but we already know. The gondola consultancy knows their way around more bureaucratic cities than Hamilton elsewhere in the world. Even longershots have happened elsewhere.
Several longshots in a row are finally happening (Cannon Cycle Track, SoBi, LRT funding, etc) and by 2025, the city may be more open to giving the go-ahead to a privately-funded gondola.
Attempting to snuff the gondola topic will do exactly the opposite -- I will continue to do rebuttals -- and no,
driverless cars won't make gondolas obsolete [explanation], either (and
even when they DO arrive, it will NOT make the specific gondola obsolete. People will still take many forms of transport available to them), and besides, the gondola corridor I am currently advocating, is far away from any kind of transport access (car access or LRT access) corridor anyway.
You may have heard from other people that I may also disagree with (too) along with you: I don't subscribe to other gondola advocates who think A-Line should be replaced by a gondola (you may have heard other people about this) -- But that does not automatically mean I pull back on behind-the-scenes gondola advocacy to prevent that from happening, as I really feel LRT accesses are absolutely esssential.
Any public anti-transit talk (anti-bus, anti-LRT, anti-gondola, etc) will catch my/our attention.
Since we moved permanently here two years ago, we are involved very actively in multiple initiatives. We love where we live so much, that if we ever won the $60M lottery, we are definitely staying put -- we're pretty firm here. My spouse being part of various groups including Barton, cycling, LRT, Sherman Hub, etc. and we have retired city planners and Hamilton municipal election candidates on our LRT advocacy team already, and we now do presentations to triple-digit attendance. Look at how longshot funding the Hamilton LRT was, and many people have never given up on that!
The momentum is building (steps forward, step back, step forward, etc) and we really, really, really want to prevent the LRT from being
screwed up.
Me and Alain will be training at the Hamilton Community Foundation's Neighbourhood Leadership Institute, though some have remarked we're already graduates before we even started that...
Yes, Hamilton will be a difficult nut to crack, but, again, we're talking 2020-2029 ballpark, and talking shovel-start. This may be a 10-15 year behind-the-scenes slog and will pounce at any opportunity window. If HSR threats occur, that definitely will get prioritized.
So here's my fear;
"Hey Mountain Residents! Now, we only have XYZ Millions of dollars for better transit to get you home up the mountain. Would you prefer these sweet, cool, modern gondolas like a ski resort? Or these big, loud, poor-people buses?"
Legitimate fear. We WILL act quite aggressively against that.
HSR and LRT is more important.
I will adjust priorities accordingly, LRT/HSR disasters happen before then, and that would bump the gondola down the road, but there are ones setting in for the 20-year longhaul (myself included).
I'll let the topic quiet down until the next time I see any public gondola talk (inclusive of replies to me that disagree with gondola elements).
If we want to talk about gondolas, let's wait until all my previous points have been met. Then and only then would it be worth a discussion.
We may have opinions of where the different thresholds are... but fundamentally we agree it's too early to discuss in public.
However, any gondola opposition will have quick public response/action by gondola advocates (myself included) -- you've already figured out it's not possible to convince me otherwise, no matter how impossible/byzantine our city might be sometimes.
Let's get our sub-par transit system operating properly before these other 'wants'!
Agreed. If HSR worsens before 2019, that definitely bumps things out.
One of our LRT advocates wrote a college thesis paper on LRT+HSR integration.
Over the last 3-6 months we've rapidly expanded our involvement in civic matters. Several of us do attend a few City Council events (e.g. LRT sub-committee), as well as community events. Some
pictures of our presentation to a 100+ audience. Both of us are involved in the Sherman Hub Community Meetings (Alain as Vice-Chair, myself as Co-Communications Coordinator).
My spouse's planning to do our 5-minute piece at the Feb 9 meeting due to the threat of Rapid Ready pullback threat which we are against (bus scalebacks).
All in all, over the last 6 months, we've grown our connections by more than an order of magnitude..
We have lots to learn but we learn fast, and WILL learn more and more....