sixrings
Senior Member
The only way i think the DRL gets built before 2025 is if we do get the expos or some strange universe the olympics come back. Otherwise I will agree I am pessimistic and at the same time optimistic for a 2030 opening.
Many of you are way too pessimistic. The data supports construction of the DRL and the project already has a significant number of proponents. At this stage it's a matter of mobilizing public support and opinion which will help spur greater political action.
not that I know of but I dont see many in support of it either... more infrastructure with less taxes seems to be the illogical logic of the times.Are there any politicians who've explicitly come out against the relief line?
not that I know of but I dont see many in support of it either... more infrastructure with less taxes seems to be the illogical logic of the times.
Wrong.
1) Residents have asked the city to put a moratorium on development - we have been told it is counterproductive and will result in lawsuits from developers.
2) Adding a lane to Lake Shore is fine and dandy, but the bridge across the Humber is one lane. You can't expand the bridge because the underground garage at Palace Pier is right next to it. Your narrative about developers is incorrect. Developers have actually asked for a parking lane there, but the city said no (hence the wide space between the street, sidewalk and buildings.
3) Yes, a WWLRT (or any sort of rapid transit improvement) is needed. The 501/504 are garbage routes that take 40 minutes to go from Roncesvalles to Spadina during peak periods. We're looking at improvements, not a return to the status quo which hasn't improved anything.
The political support is there but it needs to be unearthed thanks in large part to the large capital expense. JT's SmartTrack fetish doesn't help matters either. In terms of ameliorating Toronto's current rapid transit infrastructure and overall transit commute times, this is the project that will help accomplish that goal, not some pie in the sky SmartTrack proposal. The numbers for DRL Long do not lie.
The Relief Line needs a political champion.Many of you are way too pessimistic. The data supports construction of the DRL and the project already has a significant number of proponents. At this stage it's a matter of mobilizing public support and opinion which will help spur greater political action.
The Relief Line needs a political champion.
I wonder which ambitious politician wants to be remembered as the man or women who built the Relief Line?
Louis Mark! He is the visionary who became the face of the Relief Line movement.Rob Ford!
The Relief Line needs a political champion.
I wonder which ambitious politician wants to be remembered as the man or women who built the Relief Line?
Many of you are way too pessimistic. The data supports construction of the DRL and the project already has a significant number of proponents.