TheTigerMaster
Superstar
I support a subway to York U, and Steeles. Having the line go to Vaughn was a compromise that could not be turned down.[/QUOTE]
How couldn't it be turned down???
I do find it shocking that some members on here support the subway to Vaughan but don't support finishing the Sheppard line. Makes zero sense to me.
Makes a lot of sense. Heck, if we only needed another 2 km to extend to Scarborough Centre I'd support it too.
When the City of Toronto agreed to the Sheppard subway EA back in the early 1990s, Scarborough was not part of the city, and was a suburb. Remember all the discussion about the Sheppard subway in the 1980s? Why wasn't a "Scarborough isn't part of Toronto" raised?Vaughan is a suburb. Scarborough is a part of the city.
City of Toronto had to agree to the deal. They could have said no. The city could have decided that they weren't going to increase the cities debt by hundreds of millions to fund Toronto's share of the subway.I support a subway to York U, and Steeles. Having the line go to Vaughn was a compromise that could not be turned down.
How couldn't it be turned down???
If you don't think Sheppard East supports a subway--fine, don't do anything on Sheppard. But don't be stupid and put an LRT there. It's just a slap in the face as far as I'm concerned and it angers me to no end.
Can't count on that. How many people moving from a point on Queen or St. Clair to another point on the same street will use the green subway line? For anyone going short to even medium distances, no one will take a 4km detour with extra transfers to take a subway.
For the downtown oriented travelers who would take such a trip, we're better off spending billions on upgrades to the Richmond Hill and Stouffville GO lines instead of wasting it on burying rail lines in suburbia.
When the City of Toronto agreed to the Sheppard subway EA back in the early 1990s, Scarborough was not part of the city, and was a suburb. Remember all the discussion about the Sheppard subway in the 1980s? Why wasn't a "Scarborough isn't part of Toronto" raised?
No, it was only merged with Toronto very recently. 1997 if I recall correctly.I thought Scarborough was part of the City for a long time.
Before the creation of Metro Toronto, the TTC primarily served the old city, with a few odd routes out into North York, Scarborough, East York - however they required extra fares - much in the same manner TTC has recently operated in Mississauga, Vaughan, Richmond Hill, and Markham. Even after the Bloor-Danforth line was constructed, there was fare zones in the subway when it crossed the city boundary at Jane and Main Street. It was only in the 1970s that fare zones with Metro were eliminated. At about the same time, government had to start subsidizing transit.TTC serviced all of Metro Toronto and not just the old city
Not for most of the TTC's existence! Heck, for the longest time, there was only the Kingston Road streetcar running east of Victoria Park. I'd assume a lot of service that was in Scarborough at the time, ran to the old bus terminal on Danforth, east of Coxwell.so from the TTC perspective, Scarborough was part of Toronto.
I thought Scarborough was part of the City for a long time. TTC serviced all of Metro Toronto and not just the old city, so from the TTC perspective, Scarborough was part of Toronto.
Vaughan is a suburb. Scarborough is a part of the city.
Also have to point out. The distance (the shortest distance by road) from Malvern Centre (intersection of Nielsen and Mciven) to City Hall is 26.3 km. The distance Vaughan Corporate Metropolitan City Centre to City hall is only 24 km.Vaughan is a suburb. Scarborough is a part of the city.