nfitz
Superstar
I thought you were looking at left vs right, not left vs centre. What about socialists?I only used the newspapers as an example. I was trying to say that in general conservatives seem allot more "babyish" then liberals.
I thought you were looking at left vs right, not left vs centre. What about socialists?I only used the newspapers as an example. I was trying to say that in general conservatives seem allot more "babyish" then liberals.
The speed of an Eglinton LRT if underground would be about the same as if it were a subway. In fact, depending on the characteristics of the train design, it might even be faster since our subway trains have relatively slow acceleration specs.
Just what we needed. A transit city thread.
I think the mods need to start being a big more aggressive on merging these virtually identical threads.
TTC chair Karen Stintz moves to bury Mayor Rob Ford’s subway
Mayor Rob Ford’s victory in avoiding a strike by city outside workers could be short-lived as a group of 24 city councillors moves to effectively bury the mayor’s vision of underground transit.
If they are successful, Toronto would return to a 2009 light rail transit plan, and it will be clear that Ford’s unwillingness to compromise is seriously hampering his ability to move his agenda forward.
http://www.thestar.com/news/article/...-s-subway?bn=1
But will people 40-50 years laters say, "what the hell were they thinking? now it costs 70billion to reconvert the tunnel, and rip up the tracks and extend the tunnels." ?Sheppard won't have the ridership to justify its subway for 30 years at best, but more realistically 40 to 50 years. An LRT can handily take care of Sheppard's needs for the distant foreseeable future.
Yep. Council was willing to compromise, but Ford had to be stubborn enough to back himself into a corner.
But will people 40-50 years laters say, "what the hell were they thinking? now it costs 70billion to reconvert the tunnel, and rip up the tracks and extend the tunnels." ?
And it makes fiscally sense to build and constantly two forms of urban transportation in a city whose urban area only has close to 6 million residents? I would like to call BS on that one, we are not LA nor New York that can afford them. We can only afford one form of transportation, and personally I think Ford made the right call in killing Transit City.