GO service set up for success... or not
http://www.thepeterboroughexaminer.com/ArticleDisplay.aspx?e=1714227
Examiner point of view
Posted By PETERBOROUGH EXAMINER
Updated 4 hours ago
After nearly two decades of lobbying for a commuter-style transit connection to Toronto, Peterborough is about to find out whether the idea actually makes sense.
By that we mean sense from a dollars and cents perspective. Will enough riders turn up to keep the GO bus-train service from running too large an annual deficit? Or could it actually break even?
If ridership doesn’t make the grade and the line is losing the $1.3 million annually that GO officials projected when they called off service three years ago, it will mean Peterborough isn’t yet ready for a commuter line.
Metrolinx (which now operates the former GO service as well as all former municipal transit services in Toronto and area) should give the line two years before it makes that call.
During that period, the federal government should hold off on investing in a proposed rail service from Toronto to Peterborough. If a GO bus to Oshawa that hooks seamlessly into GO train service to Toronto can’t attract enough riders, a straight train route will probably get the same result.
If the bus-train line that begins Sept. 5 doesn’t pan out, it won’t be because Metrolinx scrimped on service.
Everything local riders could ask for appears to have been delivered. GO will have more morning departures and evening return trips than the competing Greyhound bus service. It will be 15 minutes faster than the bus on the early morning commuter runs, but a bit slower midday.
Price will be the other major determining factor. At $32.50 return, GO?will be less expensive than the bus. Regular commuters can pay $521 for a monthly pass ($382 for students, $325 for seniors). That will be a bargain for those who make at least 17 round trips a month.
Monthly pass sales will be watched with interest. The number will indicate whether there really is a Peterborough-Toronto commuter base – or whether those who live here and work there are ready to get out of their cars and take transit.
The popularity of a Peterborough-Oshawa monthly pass for $369 will also be an indicator of whether the service has a future. There are said to be 2,000 or more GM employees in the city and area. How many will ride GO?and then take a local Oshawa bus to work?
Convenience will be a factor for anyone who now drives to the?Oshawa GO?station and takes a train to Toronto. A ticket bought in Peterborough will take them all the way, and parking and traffic delays in Oshawa will end.
If GO can deliver the two-hour service it promises, the future could be promising.