Wow Ansem, I really admire your dedication to promoting real rapid transit solutions (not band-aid temporary fixes!) to spend so much time arguing point by point, fallacy by fallacy with a vacuum. I know his opinion cannot be swayed but I may as well try for myself.
Because it is a waste of resources to offer 2 different services on one corridor. If that was the case, you would think Sheppard's ridership would be higher. It's not. No one is using the bus service to access the subway. Who the hell wants to wait for a bus at the stations, only to have to walk again?
Only 15% of subway users city-wide are walk-ins, if even. Virtually everyone else commutes in via public transit. Which is both practical and logical if one's bus fare can also cover one's subway train ride. What's a waste of resources is to further divide up the 85 bus corridor now into three different segments such that it is no longer possible to obtain a one seat ride directly from Sheppard/Kingston to Sheppard/Yonge. Customers would have to now transfer twice; which if transferring onto a faster, more reliable service would be reasonable. However SELRT will only be marginally faster than the 85 bus (perhaps not at all, since at least the bus can clear changing traffic signals with relative ease meanwhile trams outside of exclusive ROW are at the mercy of incumbent traffic conditions). And although the average speed for buses is 17kph, Sheppard East already has a sparser population accounting for fewer and less congregated bus stops than say we'd witness along Eglinton or through the downtown. This raises the mileage the 85 bus can achieve east of Markham Road, an area where the sight of half-empty bus trips is commonplace and unlikely to change any time soon.
These factors do not lend to the case for upgrading the mode to light-rail status, especially if said line will not be in a private ROW and requires another transfer for customers to access major destinations closeby such as Malvern Town Centre, Centennial College and SCC. At most, experimental BRT should be tested along the 85 corridor first to determine whether it can even sustain high enough a ridership for deidcated ROW. These are the twenty some-odd steps Miller, Giambrone and Co. should have explored before declaring the EA process mysteriously completed at worp speed.
It's stupid. The Sheppard Subway is not a feeder line, and never will be.
You're right, if we follow the general concensus of public apathy and do nothing, not so much as raise a single voice of dissent; then yes Miller will have pigeonholed all the untapped potential Sheppard could have had to ever link two major downtown cores together. But apart from being a feeder line; the major infill growth potential in Wishing Well, Bay Mills and Agincourt would also be lost as Avenueization works best where development occurs organically, not as part of abrupt city planning. St Clair, Eglinton, Queen, Lakshore, etc. all had organic growth. It'll take more than a few misguided streetcar lines in subrubia to duplicate a process that took over a century to manifest and sustain itself elsewhere.
Your scenario is a failure. I'm willing to bet if surface rail was built on Sheppard instead of the subway, there would a line from Downsview to Meadowvale by now, and the ridership would put the current ridership to shame. All the Sheppard subway did was transfer former bus ridership. Sure there are more riders, but the subway is not even close to capacity.
Your scenario is not accessible. It's a waster of resources, and attracts the minimal amount of riders.
Your scenario is the epitome of failure. Downsview to Yonge doesn't have the density to support anything more than an express bus service, which it already has. Ditto Markham to Morningside. It takes a lot less money (as low as $6 million per kilometre) to build a continuous network of BRT ROW right across the city landscape. BRT in private ROW operating on biodiesels and bi-artics would have the same environmental and reduced labour avantages as the LRT. Literally for less than the cost of one single Transit City Line, the whole city, every ward, could be recieving mass transit.
Begs the question, why bother wih LRTs if they cost more, aren't in private ROW and will make commutes longer than via the bus? Or better yet, why place them in corridors where there's already a half-finished subway line just miles away from several major trip-generators? It's farcical that you complain about undercapacity on a subway line that ends arbitrarily yet figure that a cross-city LRT line missing several nodes and itself terminating at non-destinations will garner oh so much higher volumes of ridership.
Don't you get it from the articles, and comments at the open houses? People want ACCESSIBILITY. Speed is a factor too, but you need to find a good balance between the 2. If someone cannot walk, or at leas bike to a station, chances are they will not bother.
How many people outside of the YUS loop downtown actually walk it to their local subway station? Even when I used to live 4 blocks away from the Bloor-Danforth I'd await the bus. Seriously this is an absurd justification of LRT. As if to say buses aren't accessible and because they can radiate themselves onto minor residential streets will not prove to be even closer to where people actually live than SELRT will be, affixed to only the one corridor.
Who cares? God. You just don't get it. What is the point of "Rapid Transit", if you cannot capture the most riders? A subway with 1km station spacing does not work in Toronto! The TTC, and city finally learned their lesson and are actually bringing high capaciy transit TO THE RIDERS.
I got to hand it to you man, you've now surpassed Second In Pie for the most illogical statements contained within a single post. First of all, SELRT's spacing will be very far apart almost comparable to some subway gaps through the downtown (almost 500m apart average). Yeah really accessible. Also to be accessible, as a side-note, it'd lend that the ROW shouldn't be within the middle of a busy throughfare where a reckless driver could accidently mow down pedestrians. Again fail! Lastly, it matters not how far apart subway stops are when a relief bus service overhead can easily cater to residents living far in-between. Routes 85A, 109, 97, 66, 20 all parallel where the subway gaps start to widen out. And while these routes are popular, the majority obviously prefers the fast convenience of travelling over a kilometre in under two minutes instead of around 10 minutes to attempt the same along the surface. Otherwise the subway wouldn't be so highly used.
Seriously stop speaking for citizens. You clearly have no idea what they want.
Add up the sum of all the downtown streetcar lines' passenger volumes and it sill won't surpass the 484 million riders per day whom prefer the Bloor-Danforth. Many of these folk live south of the line and are destined for points also located south the line. This should all infer that there's an innate preferrence for one mode above all others. And that is how we know, or can at least assert to know what the people want, because we are basing our ideology on the facts, not non-sequitors.