News   Dec 20, 2024
 1.1K     5 
News   Dec 20, 2024
 856     2 
News   Dec 20, 2024
 1.7K     0 

Roads: Gardiner Expressway catch-all, incl. Hybrid Design (2015-onwards)

I don't know why people keep bringing up tolls? Might as well bring up flying cars as nobody politically will touch it.

We also do have special constables directing traffic and trying to manage the flow of turning cars, pedestrians and vehicles going straight (lakeshore to gardiner)
Oh, and I agree. People will bring up tolls but not consider the pressure it adds onto transportation due to those tolls being added. Instead of bringing up flying cars, you could instead suggest that it would cause strain on public transportation due to constraints with staffing, and having enough fleet to deal with the influx of travelling passengers to avoid the tolls, which is what I brought up in the first place.
 
Oh, and I agree. People will bring up tolls but not consider the pressure it adds onto transportation due to those tolls being added. Instead of bringing up flying cars, you could instead suggest that it would cause strain on public transportation due to constraints with staffing, and having enough fleet to deal with the influx of travelling passengers to avoid the tolls, which is what I brought up in the first place.
Won't anyone think of the cars?!

C'mon. Transit systems still aren't back to pre-pandemic levels in most cases, so there's already room to grow. Additionally, tolling with the specific intent of supplementing subsidy to transit seems more than doable, as many cities have done/already do that.

To be honest, if money goes to improving transit (speed, reliability and affordability), the majority of the complaints will be from entitled car owners – not people who just want to get where they're going on time.
 
What makes toll roads so unpopular in Canada? Seems like tolls are pretty widely accepted everywhere else, even the US, more so than they are here.
Tolls are pretty unpopular in the US, even if they are more common. Texas has had some big state level politics about it lately as the state had been relying on tolls for most major road project fundings over the last decade and people were starting to push back now that all the projects are opening. I believe the governor recently banned new toll roads I believe.

I think Canada just has very few examples to rely on. Outside of a small number of bridges, there are almost no toll roads left in Canada which are not border crossings.. and the 407 is the only big one left. As a result when Canadians think of road tolls they think of the 407 with it's $0.60/km rate plus camera charge and account fees.

Most other places realize road tolls are more like I-90 in New York, where it's a couple of cents a km with no additional charges on top.

Still - most US road tolls and tolls in general across the globe are designed to finance infrastructure, not limit demand. Urban tolling in the GTA, be it the 407 or the Gardiner Expressway, would be more intended for congestion management and that means tolls more in line with the 407 than I-90. And that is wildly unpopular.
 
What makes toll roads so unpopular in Canada? Seems like tolls are pretty widely accepted everywhere else, even the US, more so than they are here.
Basically because the 407 exists, every mention of a toll road in ontario at least is impossible.

For example even the 412 and 418 were like $0.3/km before they were removed.
the government owned highways were bad too.
 
Tolls are pretty unpopular in the US, even if they are more common. Texas has had some big state level politics about it lately as the state had been relying on tolls for most major road project fundings over the last decade and people were starting to push back now that all the projects are opening. I believe the governor recently banned new toll roads I believe.

I think Canada just has very few examples to rely on. Outside of a small number of bridges, there are almost no toll roads left in Canada which are not border crossings.. and the 407 is the only big one left. As a result when Canadians think of road tolls they think of the 407 with it's $0.60/km rate plus camera charge and account fees.

Most other places realize road tolls are more like I-90 in New York, where it's a couple of cents a km with no additional charges on top.

Still - most US road tolls and tolls in general across the globe are designed to finance infrastructure, not limit demand. Urban tolling in the GTA, be it the 407 or the Gardiner Expressway, would be more intended for congestion management and that means tolls more in line with the 407 than I-90. And that is wildly unpopular.

Not to mention, tolling impacts the poorer middle class population the most, which is the demo that all political parties must at least appear to be catering too. And the problem there if course, is that people in this group cannot afford to live in a family size home with good transit connections, so, any tolling impacts them by either making their life more unaffordable, or drastically reducing any free time they have by increasing their travel time via transit. As always, this is a housing problem, and the solution is unpalatable to any of the political parties.
 
Not to mention, tolling impacts the poorer middle class population the most, which is the demo that all political parties must at least appear to be catering too. And the problem there if course, is that people in this group cannot afford to live in a family size home with good transit connections, so, any tolling impacts them by either making their life more unaffordable, or drastically reducing any free time they have by increasing their travel time via transit. As always, this is a housing problem, and the solution is unpalatable to any of the political parties.
Rental and home prices are pretty unaffordable across the entirety of the GTA. Further outside the major population centres (say travelling from Shelburne to Toronto) they're going to be paying an inordinate amount in gas every week anyhow. Low-middle class stand to benefit most from money going into transit. Reliance on over-paying for transportation is a real thing here in Canada. Owning a car in any community in the largest population zone in the country shouldn't have to be mandatory for anyone. Any change will bring short-term pain for those involved, no doubt. People need time to adjust, but fearing that has been half of the political problem here in the province. Drivers suffer anyway when we do nothing and still have to repair road damage (see the current Gardiner woes).

When given the option to take fast, efficient transit, most will take it. It's ultimately the stalwarts who refuse to give up using their cars are the ones who will suffer. And they are exactly the people targeted with tolls.

Even the Financial Post has gone to bat for tolls to ease costs:

 
Won't anyone think of the cars?!

C'mon. Transit systems still aren't back to pre-pandemic levels in most cases, so there's already room to grow. Additionally, tolling with the specific intent of supplementing subsidy to transit seems more than doable, as many cities have done/already do that.

To be honest, if money goes to improving transit (speed, reliability and affordability), the majority of the complaints will be from entitled car owners – not people who just want to get where they're going on time.
We have the biggest transit expansion in our history, for the first time we have an effective transit co-fare, and tens of billions being spent on transit projects. Is there anyone actually complaining aside from Joe on Facebook?

Most of the TTC's ineffectiveness is self induced, telling constables not to enforce rules, slowly driving through intersections with streetcars. The liberals and cons both shot down tolls. Why bother bringing it up?
 
Tolls are inevitable, but the type of people hanging around here are generally the type of people who want to see it happen sooner rather than later.
 
We already have the solution for rush hour congestion without implementing tolls or adding road capacity: remote work.

But as with so many issues, corporate greed prevents us from solving the problem (their commercial real estate portfolios will tank).

And it's wild how much people will contort themselves into pretzels to rationalize this unnecessary state of affairs.
 
We already have the solution for rush hour congestion without implementing tolls or adding road capacity: remote work.

But as with so many issues, corporate greed prevents us from solving the problem (their commercial real estate portfolios will tank).

And it's wild how much people will contort themselves into pretzels to rationalize this unnecessary state of affairs.
I entirely agree! Imagine the years of added capacity in the subway or the highways we'd get?

But I'm not 100 convinced about the commercial real estate angle seeing that small companies still are asking people to come in.
 
We already have the solution for rush hour congestion without implementing tolls or adding road capacity: remote work.

But as with so many issues, corporate greed prevents us from solving the problem (their commercial real estate portfolios will tank).

And it's wild how much people will contort themselves into pretzels to rationalize this unnecessary state of affairs.
There's plenty of congestion off-peak. The 401 is a permanent parking lot from the 404 to the 427 these days, the Gardiner is a disaster, the QEW is full, the DVP, etc. etc. ...

You can't remote work a warehouse or hospital or restaurant. While rush hour is the worst period for congestion, remote work won't solve weekend backups at a half dozen locations on the 401.

IMO the current transit pipeline, plus better maintenance, will make car-free trips viable for far more regional trips, especially towards the inner city/inner suburbs. Let drivers switch or sit in traffic. We might even convince York Region to pay for better local transit ops. (/s that last one)
 
There's plenty of congestion off-peak. The 401 is a permanent parking lot from the 404 to the 427 these days, the Gardiner is a disaster, the QEW is full, the DVP, etc. etc. ...

You can't remote work a warehouse or hospital or restaurant. While rush hour is the worst period for congestion, remote work won't solve weekend backups at a half dozen locations on the 401.

IMO the current transit pipeline, plus better maintenance, will make car-free trips viable for far more regional trips, especially towards the inner city/inner suburbs. Let drivers switch or sit in traffic. We might even convince York Region to pay for better local transit ops. (/s that last one)
There's a veritable army of office workers who don't need to be clogging the roads. Obviously it's not a perfect solution, but it buys us a boatload of capacity at rush hour. It's a no brainer.

I entirely agree! Imagine the years of added capacity in the subway or the highways we'd get?

But I'm not 100 convinced about the commercial real estate angle seeing that small companies still are asking people to come in.
Well it's also the commercial real estate tax base which is why Olivia Chow is pushing for return to office. As well as the automakers, auto insurers, retailers, restos etc who make money from people being in office. It's all greed.
 
Rental and home prices are pretty unaffordable across the entirety of the GTA. Further outside the major population centres (say travelling from Shelburne to Toronto) they're going to be paying an inordinate amount in gas every week anyhow. Low-middle class stand to benefit most from money going into transit. Reliance on over-paying for transportation is a real thing here in Canada. Owning a car in any community in the largest population zone in the country shouldn't have to be mandatory for anyone. Any change will bring short-term pain for those involved, no doubt. People need time to adjust, but fearing that has been half of the political problem here in the province. Drivers suffer anyway when we do nothing and still have to repair road damage (see the current Gardiner woes).

When given the option to take fast, efficient transit, most will take it. It's ultimately the stalwarts who refuse to give up using their cars are the ones who will suffer. And they are exactly the people targeted with tolls.

Even the Financial Post has gone to bat for tolls to ease costs:


Yeah, they're going to be paying a lot for gas already. No wonder they're angry at the carbon tax, and would be furious at any tolls. They can't afford it. But they also don't have a choice, except move out of the GTA, which is what many are doing, and that's going to cause much bigger problems in the long run.

And transit is all well and good for someone that works downtown, but if someone is living in a suburban community in Pickering, and commuting to an office / industrial park in Brampton, for example, there's no transit you could build that would make that trip time effective.

That's why it's a housing issue. Housing mobility needs to be higher, affordability needs to be dramatically increased, the types of homes that families are willing to live in need to be built near transit nodes. That's the only world where we can start making significant inroads into transit being a bigger part of the solution.
 

Back
Top