TheTigerMaster
Superstar
I'd say that is very likely to happen in the near future. Especially if Chow or Stntiz is elected.
I'd say that is very likely to happen in the near future. Especially if Chow or Stntiz is elected.
I don't see how lower ridership means bad transit. Transit is transit, it is there as an option when you want to take it. The fact others don't like taking it doesn't seem to affect you. Ridership is low, doesn't mean the system is bad, does it?
LA has low ridership because
1) it is very very cheap to own a car there (car price 20% lower, gas price 30% lower, insurance 50% lower than Toronto)
2) it always has a car culture. people aren't used to taking buses/subways - it kind of implies you are poor in Southern CA. Even most students drive.
I am not sure "deep down" transit riders in Toronto are glad they don't live in LA. It is too dismissive about another city. Well, maybe in LA they can afford to drive a car. How many of us don't have a car because it costs too much here in Toronto? The insurance premium in GTA is unheard of in California, which is at least partially why ridership of transit is high.
You seem to interpret high ridership as evidence that people like the TTC, when in fact they only NEED it. I honestly don't know anyone who have tons of positive things to say about the TTC.
Also: GTA is largely car dependent. Maybe not as much as LA but not far behind. Sometimes not having a car is not a choice. I know people who take the bus to carry television or 20lb of rice back home. I am sure you would prefer driving in many cases.
andToronto seems to be proud to have great public transit
I honestly don't know anyone who have tons of positive things to say about the TTC.
I don't see how lower ridership means bad transit. Transit is transit, it is there as an option when you want to take it. The fact others don't like taking it doesn't seem to affect you. Ridership is low, doesn't mean the system is bad, does it?
LA has low ridership because
1) it is very very cheap to own a car there (car price 20% lower, gas price 30% lower, insurance 50% lower than Toronto)
2) it always has a car culture. people aren't used to taking buses/subways - it kind of implies you are poor in Southern CA. Even most students drive.
I am not sure "deep down" transit riders in Toronto are glad they don't live in LA. It is too dismissive about another city. Well, maybe in LA they can afford to drive a car. How many of us don't have a car because it costs too much here in Toronto? The insurance premium in GTA is unheard of in California, which is at least partially why ridership of transit is high.
You seem to interpret high ridership as evidence that people like the TTC, when in fact they only NEED it. I honestly don't know anyone who have tons of positive things to say about the TTC.
Also: GTA is largely car dependent. Maybe not as much as LA but not far behind. Sometimes not having a car is not a choice. I know people who take the bus to carry television or 20lb of rice back home. I am sure you would prefer driving in many cases.
With increased rapid transit expansion, it frees up buses, which can be used to boost the frequencies of busier routes, as well as having spares in case of emergencies.What the TTC has done exceptionally well is the surface routes. I can't think of anywhere else in NA where you can hop on a bus that arrives at regular frequencies, have all the busses take you to a subway where you can go practically anywhere on the system for a flat fare. This is the appeal of the TTC. People in other cities would kill to have this kind of service.
I also think it speaks to Toronto's rejection of American style car culture. Toronto wisely chose to build relatively high density suburbs rather than the car-centric sprawl we see in almost all American cities. This means that providing effective, high frequency transit to the subrubs is remarkably easy compared to other cities in NA
And the situation will only get better once we open Finch West LRT, Sheppard East LRT, Eglinton Crosstown LRT, Bloor-Danforth subway extension, Toronto-York Spadina Subway Extension, Relief Line and Yonge North subway extension.
TTC buses are late all the time. The problem is that's still the core of the system after 60 years: buses. In NYC you pay to transfer but their bus system runs at the same or close to same frequencies over night.
TTC busses are not late all the time. That said, with arrivals +/- 3 minutes from scheduled arrival time happening 37% of the time, the TTC needs to do a better job with punctuality. They need to lower that percentage by two points to achieve their service standards. I would very much like to see them do that. Hopefully Byford will be getting the tools he's requested from Council to do that.
That said, unlike with most cities, punctuality hasn't been a huge concerns for the TTC. This is because the TTC runs busses at very high frequencies. Missing a bus isn't a big deal when the next is only a few minutes away. What's far more important for TTC customers is service reliability. Can I walk out to any stop and know a bus is coming?
Fair enough.+1
My thoughts: The TTC is horrible and needs plenty of capital investment. However, the TTC is one of the best systems in NA. Looking at a map and saying," aha, city x has y more of z" is nice, but once you actually ride the systems and see all of "human level" details that are missing from those allegedly better systems, you'll come to appreciate the TTC more. Believe it or not, the TTC has actually been doing a lot right which is why it's so successful. And this will only get better with the tens of billions of capitol investment happening right now.
LA suffers from the same low density sprawl as Toronto only in bigger proportion. It will make it very hard to have successful rapid transit. It's the same as trying to build rapid transit in GTA suburbs. Distances are so long that the cost way too high for the ridership. Because of low density, most people will not live close enough to rapid transit unless you overbuild. You can have feeder buses but when you add connections to the long distances traveled it results in way too long commute and low ridership.
A good commuter train system would serve them better.
LA suffers from the same low density sprawl as Toronto only in bigger proportion. It will make it very hard to have successful rapid transit. It's the same as trying to build rapid transit in GTA suburbs. Distances are so long that the cost way too high for the ridership. Because of low density, most people will not live close enough to rapid transit unless you overbuild. You can have feeder buses but when you add connections to the long distances traveled it results in way too long commute and low ridership.
A good commuter train system would serve them better.