steveintoronto
Superstar
Yeah, got just past that, and realized what I was getting into. They're not doing you a favour, far from it.You will need to create an account.
Think twice!
Yeah, got just past that, and realized what I was getting into. They're not doing you a favour, far from it.You will need to create an account.
Just in time to turn it off for the TIFF detours. Now if they could use transit signal priority for the detour as well, then maybe I would get some little (very little) pleasure from it.
If Ford has a problem with that, he has a problem region wide...“That works out to about 50 cents per trip,” said Graham Haines, CBI research manager.
He said the study used data from the City of Toronto and analyzed time savings using Metrolinx’s standard measurement of $17.36 for each hour of in-vehicle travel time, noting they used the Metrolinx number as the agency “developed a standard methodology for how they evaluate the cost and benefits of transit projects.”
The King St. pilot project is saving downtown Toronto commuters approximately $11.5 million a year in terms of time, a new study has concluded, with the authors recommending Toronto city council make the project permanent.
Ryerson University’s City Building Institute (CBI) released a report Thursday saying that according to their calculations the project saves $10.9 million in time for existing streetcar users and $0.6 million for new users.
From: https://www.thestar.com/news/gta/20...5-million-in-time-per-year-ryerson-study.html
Full Report at: https://www.citybuildinginstitute.ca/2018/09/20/value-of-time-savings-in-king-st-transit-pilot/
Yes. Anyone who thinks that Doug Ford will prefer fact over prejudice - especially a prejudice previously and publicly espoused - is trusting in hope over experience.Doug Ford will ignore the 70 seated people and 181 standing people on board those streetcars and be more concerned about the 1.3 people in the automobiles.
Very true since he hates streetcars.Doug Ford will ignore the 70 seated people and 181 standing people on board those streetcars and be more concerned about the 1.3 people in the automobiles.
I thought it was the feds that said no to it when the city of Toronto applied for funding for them under that program that involved putting up signs that the Harper government had.The province said no to the current order.
More like 1.05. 1.3 is extremely generous.Doug Ford will ignore the 70 seated people and 181 standing people on board those streetcars and be more concerned about the 1.3 people in the automobiles.
This can certainly happen if there is some sort of disruption/accident and/or when a shift change means cars are going out of service and heading 'home'. If you are trying to report a more serious problem with route management you need more than one (rather vague) report of a personal experience. (For examples of 'scientific' observations take a look at the reports that Steve Munro posts on the King project. (Yes, he does report that the TTC's route management is poor but he identifies where and why bunching occurs.) (Of course, there are no streetcars at 'Union and King' either ....)Was at Union and King Street last night, saw probably 7 streetcars pass east bound and only 1 west bound . . .
How about just eliminating left turns, but still allowing through movements?
The point is that is shouldn't rely on enforcement - it should be a solution that is logical and would be supported by motorists regardless of enforcement. Enforcement should be for the ~2% who deliberately violate the rules, not the 25% who don't understand the rules because they are so counter intuitive.I don't see how that's any more enforceable than 'no straight'. Change the laws to allow enforcement by camera, don't change the pilot.
The point is that is shouldn't rely on enforcement - it should be a solution that is logical and would be supported by motorists regardless of enforcement. Enforcement should be for the ~2% who deliberately violate the rules, not the 25% who don't understand the rules because they are so counter intuitive.
If they knew what needed to be done, then a pilot wouldn't have been needed - they could have just done the right thing right away.
They learned something with this trial, but why not try to learn more. Was most of the benefit derived from preventing left turns, or preventing through movements. Isolate your variables.