ehlow
Senior Member
Sure... both is better than one.It's less than ideal if the Tory plan results in the cancelation of the Relief Line. GO RER + the Relief Line is clearly the better option.
Yonge will still be there 200 years from now (assuming nothing horrible happens).
It's amazing you can say that with such confidence given that cars, streetcars, subways, and lightbulbs were not widely used or invented 200 years ago.
The 1st electric underground train aka subway was built 124 years ago in 1890, so no subway has ever lasted even close to 200 years.
I don't know about that. All I can say is that if I had to pick between waiting 7 years for something to be built that I'd get to use within my lifetime, or waiting 15 years for something better that I'll never get to use it in my lifetime, I'd easily pick the latter. I still want this city to build things the right way even if I'll have zero use for it. It's for similar reasons why I support my taxes paying for things that I know I have no personal use for.
Maybe my perspective will change 30 years from now, when my impending mortality is more a concern.
To me the point of transit is to make people's lives better, and I do care about people that are alive now. 15-20 years is a big chunk of someone's life. I have nothing against long term projects but for me a line being open in 7 years vs 15 is a big difference, to me.
If you don't care whether it's 7, 15, or 25 years later because you're concerned about the year 2214... ok
It's not about age, I'm not that old