Amare
Senior Member
By rural areas I meant suburbs, wrong usage of words. Places like Ancaster and Dundas more specifically.At least suburbs would understand transit. Rural areas? Bus service to X an Y's farms? Can cows be passengers?
By rural areas I meant suburbs, wrong usage of words. Places like Ancaster and Dundas more specifically.At least suburbs would understand transit. Rural areas? Bus service to X an Y's farms? Can cows be passengers?
Hamilton is a cautionary tale. The folks in Ancaster and Dundas aren’t cretins, they simply don’t see value in transit because to a large extent the don’t need or use it. And they don’t go into central Hamilton, ever. There really is a political divide that we haven’t found a way to overcome.
This was likely a part of the province's "pause" of all projects, including the Hamilton LRT. Of course the private bidders had stopped work, so had the province. The province only resumed work a month or two before the cancellation.. (which makes me wonder why they didn't just cancel it a few months earlier).
^I’m convinced that the Hamilton announcement was already decided and simply held waiting a suitable opportunity. That may have involved waiting for the trumped-up numbers report, or it may have been even more opportunistic: just about every senior journalist on the transit/urban file was elaewhere, attending Toronto City Council that day, dealing with a bigger-headline story. The Mulroney non-photo-op, which sure looked to be hastily arranged, was mostly covered by junior reporters who were the only ones available. That can’t be a coincidence.
There is every indication that the “pause” by the incoming government resulted in a prioritization of ML spending from the Wynne “sky’s the limit” fantasy wish list to a more serious list of what’s affordable and what takes precedence. There have been enough big ticket announcements and contracts let since that pause to conclude that it wasn’t (as we feared at that time) a whole-scale cancellation of all transit projects. The thing that Hamilton had working against it (in addition to voter ambivalence) was - no shovels in the ground and no cancellation penalties.
That overall reprioritisation was a good thing IMHO....but....Since ML under Wynne had been totally secretive about which projects were actually in gear, Ford was able to make a bunch of cuts or deferrals without being accused of cutting anything. Hamilton was an exception to that - it was already publicly on the books and had to be surgically removed. So they waited until the coast was mostly clear......
- Paul
Hamilton is a cautionary tale. The folks in Ancaster and Dundas aren’t cretins, they simply don’t see value in transit because to a large extent the don’t need or use it. And they don’t go into central Hamilton, ever. There really is a political divide that we haven’t found a way to overcome.
So the timeline is something like this:This was likely a part of the province's "pause" of all projects, including the Hamilton LRT. Of course the private bidders had stopped work, so had the province. The province only resumed work a month or two before the cancellation.. (which makes me wonder why they didn't just cancel it a few months earlier).
Hah!It won't happen, no one is going to bid on it.