Neutrino
Senior Member
Some sort of Uber style last mile solution?
For better or worse Metrolinx is moving hard to Private Enterprise. I actually favour this, but not by the present QP regime, who are inept or worse. Australia is a good example of where this has been done very successfully, but by rational conservatives, not pea-brained populists....Global News' QP guy had a sit-down with Verster. We get some info on important things: e.g fare integration is approx 5yrs from completion...and won't require gov't subsidies (somehow). Also that Metrolinx will now run like a business (wonder where they got that line). And as your link shows I guess they're to become real estate developers too. Clearly a full plate going forward...
Seems rather an unnecessary use of a minister's time.Announcement tomorrow. Perhaps GO is making something like the CityPass that includes transportation + attraction tickets?
Seems rather an unnecessary use of a minister's time.
All very fishy to me!
Nothing will be "contracted out". A consortium would assess a proposed project, and remember, GO is already at the DBFOM level, consider a funding model, then approach QP to tell them how they planned to build it, and seek co-operation, failing co-operation provincially, they'd seek a federal charter (which may be the plan from the start) and build it with the opportunity for Metrolinx to lease and run it. Or not.Imagine how the debate over Kirby station, or (God forbid) the Line 2 extension in Scarborough would be unfolding if the decision had been contracted out to a (self interested) vendor.
The model
Launched in July 2015, the model allows CDPQ Infra to act as the owner-operator of certain infrastructure projects while assuming responsibility for the planning and financing phases, execution and operation.
An exclusive subsidiary of Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec, CDPQ Infra will generate commercial returns for la Caisse and its partners while limiting the financial impact of infrastructure projects on the government’s balance sheet.
More information
I'm sorry, but these town halls are nothing more than empty pie-in-the-sky promises, I'll reverse my skepticism when the shovels hit the ground.The town hall Metrolinx put on in Kitchener was fantastic. Lots of clear demand for new services and a lot of positive news from Verster. These town halls were a very wise decision from the start.
That's not "anger"...it's a correct objective observation. They're about 'playing PR' to placate the 'troublemakers' asking real questions.They aren’t about making promises, they are about answering questions. Misguided anger much . . .
https://www.thestar.com/news/gta/20...t-fares-on-short-go-transit-trips-to-370.htmlMetrolinx is planning significant changes to GO Transit fares that would make short trips cheaper while raising the price of longer journeys.
The proposed changes, announced by the provincial transit agency Monday and scheduled to go into effect April 20, would lower fares for trips less than roughly 10 kilometres to $3.70 when paid for using a Presto fare card, a reduction of as much as $2.
At the same time, the cost of longer distance trips using Presto would increase by a smaller amount of up to 4 per cent.
Metrolinx president and CEO Phil Verster said the lower fares, combined with more frequent service the agency has implemented over the past year and a half, are intended to attract a different type of rider than the long-haul commuters who traditionally use GO.
“We see a huge market for short-distance ridership which we have not tapped into yet,” he said.
“We are seeing more and more people being flexible in how they travel. Shorter journeys on GO now becomes cost-wise very attractive.”
Verster said the lower prices on short trips are expected to attract two million new riders a year to GO, and could provide “relief” to the TTC by diverting customers away from the crowded subway system.
For example, under the proposed new prices a trip from Bloor GO station to Union Station would take about 12 minutes and cost $3.70, just 60 cents more than a similar subway trip from Dundas West to Union that would take twice as long, according to Metrolinx. The GO ride from Bloor to Union currently costs $4.71.
Riders switching between the TTC and GO will still have to pay two fares, but under a pre-existing policy will still get a discount of $1.50 if using Presto.
Verster couldn’t say how many TTC riders might be convinced to make the switch to GO. [...]
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From the TorStar:
https://www.thestar.com/news/gta/20...t-fares-on-short-go-transit-trips-to-370.html
It's not as benevolent as the Lib proposal, but still in the right direction, and tilts a number of factors to change the lay of the transit land.
It's a bit of a debate in the https://urbantoronto.ca/forum/threa...-mmm-group-limited.3188/page-640#post-1435378 string. Officially on the UPX fare system, as best as can be determined, no reduction. But there's absolutely no indication of suspending the use of GO fare between Union/Bloor/Weston, so it applies to those, but wouldn't if you were foolish enough to use the UPX fare machines between those points.What about UPX?
https://toronto.citynews.ca/2019/04...tance-fares-and-increase-long-distance-fares/This is no April Fools’ joke – Metrolinx says it will be reducing Presto fares on short distance trips starting April 20.