DaveFlavanoid
New Member
Here's a couple of random quotes to show how misinformed this whole debate is getting to be.
#1. Remove is not "fiscally conservative" (i.e. cheaper). The city is just torquing the data to make it seem that way, by including an unprecedented 100 years of O&M costs in the maintain option. OBVIOUSLY it is cheaper to keep the highway than tear it down.
#2 It is not a few people who use it daily, and their benefits are not small. By the City's data it is 110,000 people a day on Gardiner East. Even if removal costs them only 3 minutes a day (which we all know is too small), and they value their time at only $20/hour (too small), and they don't delay anybody else when they have to switch to surface roads, and we count these benefits for only 30 years (not the crazy 100 years that remove advocates are using), then what do we get?
This: The time lost if we remove the Gardiner is worth at least $1.2 billion to those drivers. Probably much more.This is far more than the cost of maintaining the expressway.
Please stop using these bad data to pretend tearing down a working piece of infrastructure is the low cost "responsible" thing to do.
This i the real story I think,. Remove advocates don't care about the numbers. They just hate cars.
And before you start going after me with ad hominem attacks: I live downtown, I commute by bike, my car often sits in its parking spot for a week or more before I get into it. I'm just trying to talk sense here.
I'm on the fence, probably leaning a little more towards removal. I typically run along the lakeshore out towards Woodbine in the morning, and I will agree that that part of the town is a mess during the morning commute, so I can't imagine it would get any better if the Gardiner was removed.
The reason I may lean towards removal is I do not like cars, as you mentioned - I think you are spot on with that opinion. If by removing it and congestion gets worse in that area, it could do two things. First, it could drill home the point to the politicians, that major investments in transit are needed. Secondly, it may encourage people to take transit, or make better decisions on where they live. Everyone has a reason for why they live and work in opposite ends of the city, but most of them are just excuses.