Midtown Urbanist
Superstar
As much as I would like the 905 and outer 416 to have good transit, the commuter rail style configurations aren't an answer to Old Toronto neighbourhoods which lack rapid transit access.
It is actually contradictory goals. Even if you opt to provide local service on those rail corridors, by providing stops in those Old Toronto neighbourhoods, you add dwell time and delay to all those 905ers and outer 416 commuters that the scheme is prioritizing in the first place. You might be able to resolve it by running local and express services, but you can only fit so many trains per hour on those tracks.
Or... You could allow RER to do its job as a commuter rail line, and build the Relief Line to do its job as a rapid transit line.
It is actually contradictory goals. Even if you opt to provide local service on those rail corridors, by providing stops in those Old Toronto neighbourhoods, you add dwell time and delay to all those 905ers and outer 416 commuters that the scheme is prioritizing in the first place. You might be able to resolve it by running local and express services, but you can only fit so many trains per hour on those tracks.
Or... You could allow RER to do its job as a commuter rail line, and build the Relief Line to do its job as a rapid transit line.