There were numerous third party consultations on the Eglinton corridor which identified ridership projections rivalling the Bloor line. Most were posted on this blog.
You can't move Bloor level loads on an Eglinton subway because you've got nowhere for them to go. The LRT line would be capable of handling in the neighbourhood of 10,000 per hour, well above the projected demand forecast by transit experts. Oh wait, you don't like that outcome? Ok, just accuse the experts of fudging the numbers because you know more than they do.
The contracts are simple to sort out.. Here are the major ones I've identified.
Any time anyone says anything involving a lot of money is "simple", my Spidey sense tells me they don't know what they are talking about.
1)The Flexity trams for Transit City... Well, nothing is being built yet, and many Ontario towns are embarking on major LRT projects.. Ottawa, Kitchener, Waterloo, Hamilton, just to name a few... Ontario can easily send those cars to those cities sans penalties.
Nothing being built - if you don't count the Sheppard work. Have you actually looked at the LRT vehicle contracts and Metrolinx funding plans/arrangements for those listed cities to see if they can 'easily' and 'sans penalties' switch the TC contract to them? If I was a manufacturer with a legal contract who is now being told that instead of wanting delivery in 2015 (and therefore providing work for my employees and money for my bank account) they are now to be delivered sporadically out to 2020 or beyond (if at all), then I might want to raise the issue of getting some kind of compensation for this change of contract.
2) The TBM for Eglinton.. Well under Ford we'll be building subways in Scarborough and possibly under Eglinton so it doesn't really matter where it goes, right?
One or the other, you don't get both (unless you have a money printing press in your basement). And again, you are now unilaterally changing the timing of the contract because instead of starting Eglinton tunneling in the next couple of years, you now won't be needing your TBM until at least 2015, or 2020, or maybe never (depending on how long it takes you to go through all the planning and designing and changing of both multiple times until you are actually ready to start the work).
4) The only money spent on Transit City has been consulting. This amounts to a few million, something the city throws at bullshit projects all the time. I think Ford AND the city can swallow this without feeling too sour about it.
I'm sure your estimate of only "a few million" having been spent on TC is more accurate than the numbers reported by the TTC, Metrolinx or the province who talk of numbers over one hundred million dollars (although I guess technically, one hundred still qualifies as "a few"). If you (and Ford) think it is no big deal to saddle the Toronto taxpayers with over one hundred million dollars in costs for absolutely no gain (since you are basically going back to the drawing board), then I'd like to ask why anyone would get themselves into a lather about a $12,000 retirement party and why we need to worry about spending on council staplers.