Allandale25
Senior Member
In 1950, Pete Koltnow had just graduated college and needed to get from New York to Yuma, Arizona, where he was due to start a new job. He had no car, so he hitchhiked nearly 2,500 miles, flagging ride after ride from total strangers.
"Back to bumpy seats and the open road," he wrote to his girlfriend Dot Witter from Villa Ridge, Missouri. "Trucks are kindest to me."
Koltnow ultimately got to Yuma in a few days. Years later, the series of postcards he sent to Witter became part of a Smithsonian exhibition on transportation history. But that's not because his trip was at all unusual — it's because the postcards are a remarkably detailed record of a once-routine transportation mode that has essentially vanished.
Nowadays, hitchhiking is perceived as dangerous, and few drivers are willing to pick someone up. Police departments discourage it, and many states explicitly ban it. Most hitchhikers have no other options, and do so as a last resort.
"Dating back to the Depression and World War II, it used to be very normal to see someone sticking their thumb out and pick them up," says Alan Pisarski, a transportation researcher. "We lost that somewhere along the way."
For people too young to remember the age of hitchhiking, it brings up a perplexing question: what happened?
Most experts agree that one of the biggest factors in the decline of hitchhiking has nothing to do with fear of crime. "Probably the most important thing is the huge growth we've seen in car ownership," says David Smith, a British sociologist who's studied hitchhiking trends.
Since the 1960s, the percentage of US households that own cars has steadily increased — and the proportion of those with multiple cars has grown even faster:
Over the past couple of decades, as cars have lasted longer and gotten cheaper, this trend has extended to lower-income families.
It all adds up to a much smaller percentage of the population needing to hitchhike in the first place. In many developing countries, on the other hand, far fewer people own cars, and hitchhiking is still commonplace.
Metrolinx - Abstract - RFI-2020-LCLO-066 - Rfi-2020-lclo-066 : Bus Route Operator
www.metrolinx.merx.com
Ontario Newsroom
news.ontario.ca
"Previously, one carrier was given a licence to operate a certain route for a particular destination or city. Effective July 1, carriers do not need a license to operate a new route and multiple carriers may offer service along the same or complimentary routes, helping to improve travel options for Ontarians."Metrolinx - Abstract - RFI-2020-LCLO-066 - Rfi-2020-lclo-066 : Bus Route Operator
www.metrolinx.merx.com
Ontario Newsroom
news.ontario.ca
One million square feet - Wow. If you compare that size to existing studios owned by hackman that is crazy, as well as to the 800,000 sq ft studio city in Markham. As a film buff I am going crazy.
The private companies can pay a small fee per ticket to use the system. That monies can be used to help Interline ticketing to allow seamless transfers between carriers, and subsidy for routes that require it.Do we want free enterprise or publicly funded? Or a combination of both? We can't expect for-profit companies to operate without. If a route is seen as needed and no private carrier is willing to take it, then perhaps some version of GO/ONTC.
I'm not sure what a common booking system involving private carriers brings to the table other than inter-line convenience, but at what cost? No doubt the carriers would want the province to pay for it. With the province clearly wanting out of regulating the industry, this would seem like getting back in.
So would it be a fee or a subsidy? Why should a private carrier subsidize another private carrier? If I'm a local operator with a majority of passengers who don't interline; travel to a larger centre to shop, etc. then return home, what's in for me?The private companies can pay a small fee per ticket to use the system. That monies can be used to help Interline ticketing to allow seamless transfers between carriers, and subsidy for routes that require it.
ONR already uses a booking system so require the carriers to use that system. Metrolinx and VIA rail have a he ability to do it now, which makes it convenient.




