kEiThZ
Superstar
I count 15 stations on Leslie and east, and 11 on Dufferin and west. The rest are "central".
Rather convenient to write off the rest as "central" . In the east, Yonge is rather far from Scarborough compared to how far the Spadina line is or the TYSSE will be from say Rexdale.
The TYSSE adds 5 to "west" - with a caveat I state later.
Eglinton adds 5 west and 8 east. Closes the gap somewhat, in the most likely scenario. Sans Sheppard, 2 concessions out from Yonge that's 21 west, 23 east
Add the Sheppard line that's 4 more stations for the east either way, and 0 for west.
= 27-21 for the east
Net gain is 10 for the west end, and 8 for the east, possibly 12 - though if we're going to start including the TYSSE stations in the 905 then we have to ponder whether the westward-skewed GTA - and Toronto itself - means we should move our east-vs-west end boundaries to the west to reflect that. In that case, the East definitely wins.
In reality, all three suburban boroughs are losing a lot with this proposal.
We all know what's going to happen with Sheppard. And in fact, if STC is the terminus, the SRT is losing a station, with the rest being rebuilt. The only new stations in Scarborough come from the Eglinton line. That's only a handful of stops. Indeed, the TYSSE alone adds nearly as many stops as the Eglinton LRT does in Scarborough.
Quick math: Eglinton LRT in Scarborough (6) + BD stops (3) + SRT stops (5) = 14 stops with Eglinton. 8 without.
Compare that to the west end: Spadina north of Eglinton (9 with TYSSE) + Eglinton LRT west of Eglinton West station (5) = 14 stops with Eglinton. 9 without. And we all know TYSSE is not in danger...even from Hudak.
....and that's all accepting this thesis that everything between the Spadina line and Yonge is "central" and that the Yonge line is just as convenient to Scarborough residents as Spadina/TYSSE is to west-enders.
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