wild goose chase
Active Member
I know many more young people nowadays that live in Toronto and don't own a car and rely on transit it seems compared to the past generation. The age at which people first drive seems to be getting higher -- there are many who do so after graduating high school or even post-secondary as adults rather than during high school now.
I don't know which part of this is due to the rising cost of owning a car (and house and well, many other things) compared to the past, and how much is due to transit becoming more attractive of an option and things like downtown living attracting suburbanites. But it's not just a trend for Toronto -- many US cities are also showing this and teenagers are driving less and less.
I wonder if this is a lasting trend or something that's just temporary (teenagers not being as able to afford cars as easily as they used to say a generation ago) and would change when the young folks settle down and can afford as well as feel the need for a car to get around more? Will the next generation have significantly more people using transit than current and past ones?
I don't know which part of this is due to the rising cost of owning a car (and house and well, many other things) compared to the past, and how much is due to transit becoming more attractive of an option and things like downtown living attracting suburbanites. But it's not just a trend for Toronto -- many US cities are also showing this and teenagers are driving less and less.
I wonder if this is a lasting trend or something that's just temporary (teenagers not being as able to afford cars as easily as they used to say a generation ago) and would change when the young folks settle down and can afford as well as feel the need for a car to get around more? Will the next generation have significantly more people using transit than current and past ones?