LNahid2000
Senior Member
lol there is street life around Glencairn Station?or street life as Glencairn station has for Allen Rd.
lol there is street life around Glencairn Station?or street life as Glencairn station has for Allen Rd.
I don't think there's anyone I generally support who hasn't let me down in some way during this recent transit "debate."
The fact that he thought the buses run from Finch could just be a slip of the tongue. The fact that he doesn't know they run constantly and packed is more galling. Just another downtowner who has no clue what's going on outside the old city. (Of course, Rob Ford isn't a downtowner but then his inability to grasp even the broadest nuances of transit -- right down to the routing of the line to which he is vehemently opposed -- stem from a whole different set of intellectual deficits).
IF you want to attack the Spadina extension as being the "same mistake" as Scarborough I suppose you could point out it was also suburban vote buying. That's a fair enough argument (even if I don't 100% agree) but it doesn't change the fact there was no regional transit plan in place when the extension was funded. My problem with Scarborough isn't LRT vs. subway (because even if I prefer LRT, you could at least ARGUE for a subway) but how the process has entirely subverted the principles of having Metrolinx and The Big Move.
New transit planning, same as the old transit planing.
lol there is street life around Glencairn Station?
Many people who attack this expansion just don't like the fact that it crosses Steeles. If it stopped at Steeles you wouldn't see all those complaints. They also make it seem like it's taking money from the downtown relief line when Toronto is now building a subway in Scarborough but yet they wont get mad at York Region for wanting the subway to go 2 km to Vaughan.
york will be paying for the subway operations, don't be a fool and think otherwise. The TTC will send them the bill every year for the portion north of Steeles.
I was under the impression Toronto would be on the hook for all operating costs.york will be paying for the subway operations, don't be a fool and think otherwise. The TTC will send them the bill every year for the portion north of Steeles.
According to this post from a couple of years ago:nope, it will be the same setup with the buses the TTC currently runs north of Steeles. TTC runs them, and sends the bill to York.
York Region would make no financial contribution to ongoing operations
This has nothing (or not much) to do with bus operating costs in York Region. it has to do with development plans.
In a few decades, we'll know (to stay on thread) if Vaughan Metropolitan Centre and all of Places to Grow was a total bust. In the meantime, the hope is that extending the subway (barely!) into the suburbs will facilitate a different, more sustainable kind of development. It's provincially legislated and York's official plan etc. etc. so even if it saves them a few bucks on buses, that's a really insulting way to portray what's going on here. (And that's not even getting into how many HUNDREDS of those buses clog up Yonge street for motorists, spewing CO2 into the air, damaging the roads etc., all because the current terminal isn't near where its riders are coming from.)
That was what I thought too. I remember reading a figure of $14million annual loss because of the Vaughan section.I was under the impression Toronto would be on the hook for all operating costs.