golodhendil
Active Member
Multiple types and routes of transit can also meet at a station because it is where the destination is. Boston South Station, New York Penn and Grand Central are the hubs that they are, not so much (only) because passengers can change from regional rail to intercity rail (GCT isn't even connected to Amtrak; and of course there is a significant number of people who do transfer at the other two), but because they are within minutes of walking from some of the biggest financial, employment and entertainment centres of North America (or a short subway ride away, but RR-to-subway transfer wasn't the point of the current discussion), and that commuters getting off from Boston and NYC's vast regional/commuter rail networks use these stations as their destination and not as a transfer point (especially not onto Amtrak). Again, I am not debating potentialities or talking about what's the situation like at any other rail hubs around the world, I was fairly specifically referring to the actualities in the NEC where the vast majority of ridership of regional rail networks is towards the employment centres at each of the cities vs the comparatively much smaller ridership that continues onto intercity rail.Multiple types of transit meet at a single station mainly because of transfers. You still have to get from the endpoint to your final destination. For downtown stations that means local and regional transit (and pickups and taxis obviously). You even see this at Union, despite how disjointed GO, VIA, and TTC are from each other.
Those are all good things, but none of them really address the point. Of course people are happy when there's new service and unhappy when service is cut. What makes the difference is when people are finally concerned enough to act on their preferences with advocacy and their votes, because even a far-from-tepid level of support in opinion polls can amount to nothing being done to actually push the issue. And speaking of California, arguably the one place in the US outside the NEC that is most ready for HSR and for which the plans had been farthest along, the HSR proposition only passed by a 5% margin, dropping from the 10-20% margin from earlier opinion polls, and this was before it was realized that the technical studies were less extensive or thorough as would have been liked, and the costing "forgot" to take inflation into account. A successful example of HSR being pushed through by public advocacy, sure, but hardly the most encouraging one. This example also highlights why countries like Russia or China are largely uncomparable lessons for North America to learn, because this large amount of polling, lobbying, advocacy, politicking and voting needed for these things (and all the post-approval manoeuvering and recalibrations) obviously makes life a lot "harder" than simple decrees from the central government. None of these should detract rail advocates from doing what's needed or make them pessimistic, but one must still be realistic about the advocacy needed and the actual work to improve the passenger rail culture in the country / on the continent, because public opinion is fickle.Well considering the first GO lines were built in lieu of expanded highways, I'd say the public has been just fine with reallocating resources. There has been little to no opposition to the recent money to improve VIA in the corridor, while past cutbacks were very controversial. Again, new rail lines are popular whenever they open. The GO line to Barrie is getting more riders than they expected, and there's a lot of public pressure to improve rail to cities like Kitchener and Hamilton. When it comes to high speed, we have concrete North American examples like California, where voters approved HSR funding in a referendum. In Canada, opnion polls have shown that voters in Canada not only support HSR but support paying for it. http://www.ekos.com/admin/articles/HighSpeedRail.pdf
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