Juan_Lennon416
Senior Member
Even as a boulevard, the roadway will still be a fast moving roadway. Spare some change Mr. Trudeau and Mr. Mulclair for taking down the Gardiner?
For once, ksun is spot on. Developers are the reason this city is profiting as well as it is.
They have billions invested in the city and have a much larger interest than any of us in having a functioning, growing city. But what do they know?
On the other hand, adding street capacity ends up increasing congestion, as Texans just found out recently:
http://www.planetizen.com/node/77888
Fearing the PCs getting elected and upload the Gardiner and DVP to the province?So why do we have to wait until 2019 for the demolition of the Gardiner to begin? I hope there's a way to expedite the process, ahead of the upcoming provincial elections.
The DVP was never provincial. Only the section of the Gardiner west of the Humber was downloaded to the city. Why would the PCs want to upload the DVP/Gardiner to the province?
I have no idea why I typed "back to the province" instead of "to the province", but as Burloak said, that was their election promise, but I think it got overshadowed by the "100k jobs" scare.The DVP was never provincial. Only the section of the Gardiner west of the Humber was downloaded to the city. Why would the PCs want to upload the DVP/Gardiner to the province?
This is an important concept, and may be the reason why the current expressway-user numbers don't matter.
Given a choice people will always drive until congestion levels get so high it's quicker to take transit. Therefore the ratio of drivers-to-transit-users for people with a choice is determined by the capacity of the roads versus the robustness of the transit system as much as anything else. If you increase the road capacity you don't end congestion - you just get more people driving and fewer people taking transit. Conversely, if you reduce road capacity you end up with the same congestion, but more transit users and fewer cars in the downtown. That is assuming of course your transit system has the capacity to take the extra people. Therefore there are strong environmental and social arguments to be made for reducing road capacity and increasing transit capacity.
When Tory says it's going to take commuters an extra ten minutes to get downtown, what he is really saying is there will be more people on the transit system and fewer driving since that ten minutes extra driving time will convince a lot of people to take transit instead.
Here’s where councillors stood on the Gardiner issue as of Friday night:
HYBRID (15 votes)
REMOVE (16 votes)
- Mayor John Tory
- Vince Crisanti
- Stephen Holyday
- Justin Di Ciano
- James Pasternak
- Frances Nunziata
- Frank Di Giorgio
- Christin Carmichael Greb
- Cesar Palacio
- Jaye Robinson
- Jon Burnside
- Denzil Minnan-Wong
- Michelle Berardinetti
- Gary Crawford
- Norm Kelly
WILDCARDS (14 votes in three categories)
- Maria Augimeri
- Sarah Doucette
- Gord Perks
- Ana Bailao
- Mike Layton
- Joe Cressy
- Joe Mihevc
- Josh Matlow
- Kristyn Wong-Tam
- Pam McConnell
- Mary Fragedakis
- Paula Fletcher
- Janet Davis
- Mary-Margaret McMahon
- Shelley Carroll
- Paul Ainslie
UNDECIDED (9 votes)
NO RESPONSE (4 votes)
- John Campbell
- Giorgio Mammoliti
- Anthony Perruzza
- Michael Thompson
- Glenn De Baeremaeker
- Jim Karygiannis
- Chin Lee
- Raymond Cho
- Ron Moeser
MAINTAIN (1 vote)
- Mark Grimes
- Josh Colle
- John Filion
- David Shiner
- Rob Ford