smallspy
Senior Member
Three round trips per day, averaging about 25 cars each.That spur sees like 1-2 trains a day, and they are usually small trains only a couple cars long that pass quickly.
But who's counting.
Dan
Three round trips per day, averaging about 25 cars each.That spur sees like 1-2 trains a day, and they are usually small trains only a couple cars long that pass quickly.
We've got some news that *could* potentially effect the LRT to some extent (not significantly hopefully):
The Good: Fred Eisenburger is finally out, he wont be running for re-election this year. Andrea Horwath may be declaring her big to enter the race which would be great for Hamilton because of the bad
The Bad: The joke that keeps on giving Bob Bratina still intends on running, and has every intention on messing with the LRT.
Andrea Horwath sends strongest signal yet she’ll run for mayor of Hamilton
Former NDP leader Andrea Horwath has sent her strongest signal yet she will run for mayor of Hamilton in the fall.www.thestar.com
The other big candidate right now is Keenan Loomis - ex Board of Trade head for Hamilton. He seems like the typical "competent left-centrist" type character.
If Horwath runs I doubt he'll win, but without her I assume he'll be a shoo-in.
If Horwath does run, it'll be interesting to see how she actually operates with some level of actual power. Municipal politics is also very, very different than provincial.
Don’t jinx it.This project rivals the Scarborough LRT/SRT replacement for most embarrassingly long and drawn out project in Ontario transit history. Next thing you know we'll hear that this thing wont be starting construction until the next municipal election cycle in 2026.
Are there many log cabins along the LRT route?New modeling and video.