Tulse
Senior Member
The "extended sidewalks" are largely a safety measure for passengers alighting the streetcars.
Staff are predicting that vehicular traffic volumes will be reduced by up to 50% along any given block but (at a glance) aren't venturing to say how much they expect transit travel times to decrease (which is the whole point of this thing IMO).
There are parking garage entrances on King, as well as businesses that receive deliveries there. It would be extremely difficult logistically to completely ban cars on King.
Or - crazy thought - we could just exile the taxi ranks to Adelaide and Wellington, and north-south streets where there is capacity to do so. Then erect signage letting people know where to find them. If people have to walk 100-200m to a transit stop, asking them to walk 50-100m to a parallel street taxi rank is not onerous.With the current proposal I wonder if the city will enforce no stopping. I can just imagine the number of taxi's fighting for those 3 or 4 spots and the 5th taxi blocking all the cars/streetcars.
Or - crazy thought - we could just exile the taxi ranks to Adelaide and Wellington, and north-south streets where there is capacity to do so. Then erect signage letting people know where to find them. If people have to walk 100-200m to a transit stop, asking them to walk 50-100m to a parallel street taxi rank is not onerous.
The problem with ticketing taxis is presumably that they negotiate tickets down/away using the same agents delivery vehicles do, no? If fines ever looked like being onerous for the industry Jimmy K and his suburban friends would be heard from loud and clearHaving cameras to catch illegal left-turners or drivers/cyclists who drive past open doors is a provincial issue that will need new legislation. However, since a taxi license is a municipal license Toronto can implement fines/penalties without the need for provincial legislation. It should be monitored to see if taxis do block streetcars and if they do we should implement camera monitoring and fnes (with repeat fines resulting in a suspension of the license).
Of course that assumes the taxi lobby doesn't keep on buying City Hall.
Toronto can also work with Uber to ensure that the app has most of King St a no stopping zone. The "suggested pickup point" moving you away from King St
Of course it would be an Etobicoke councilor voting to kill a sane, if timid, transit improvement nowhere near his suburb, in the cause of opposing a 2% reduction in parking. Cause, WOTC, folks.TTC board has approved the King street pilot project, with councillor Campbell being the lone vote against because it removes parking spaces (staff pointed out that 180 parking spaces will be removed, but that there are still ~8,000 spaces within a five-minute walk of King).
This goes to mayor's executive committee next week and then council next month.
Of course it would be an Etobicoke councilor voting to kill a sane, if timid, transit improvement nowhere near his suburb, in the cause of opposing a 2% reduction in parking. Cause, WOTC, folks.
TTC board has approved the King street pilot project, with councillor Campbell being the lone vote against because it removes parking spaces (staff pointed out that 180 parking spaces will be removed, but that there are still ~8,000 spaces within a five-minute walk of King).
This goes to mayor's executive committee next week and then council next month.
smarter councillors from Etobicoke
*oxymoron*