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TTC: Other Items (catch all)

Construction starts in 2021 for adding the 3rd trail track for Kipling now the Regional Hub is completed. It will require a number of weekend closure to connect the 3 rd track to the current tracks that will hold 2 trains. During the closures, work will take place on the Bloor bridge as well.

Line 2 will see a number of weekend closures in 2021 for both ends and more than the past.

The only problem connecting TTC and GO at Kipling is accessibility. With the Regional Hub having accessibility to the GO platform, it will require a longer trip to/from GO and TTC if one needs to use an elevator.

TTC and GO needs to have 2 elevators to all their platform, not the one they do today.

At some point, Kipling GO platform will be upgraded like others with shelter roof and snow melting system.
 
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Yes, but large chunks of Etobicoke and North York have a similarly rubbish transit experience.
That's very true, however the transit issues are magnified in Scarborough because of it's larger land size and the subway is located in the extreme south-west quadrant of the borough.
 
That's very true, however the transit issues are magnified in Scarborough because of it's larger land size and the subway is located in the extreme south-west quadrant of the borough.

At least, the old City of Toronto has streetcars. Could be better (true transit priority for example, actually fix the track switches, etc.).
 
150M Passengers per year ~ 500K per day.

Look how far we've come, now the Yonge line gets more than that daily (prior to covid).

Just one asterisk - I remember reading somewhere on UT or perhaps in Steve Munro's blog that Toronto transit's ridership per capita has dropped since our transit heyday. But I might be remembering something wrong.
 
Just one asterisk - I remember reading somewhere on UT or perhaps in Steve Munro's blog that Toronto transit's ridership per capita has dropped since our transit heyday. But I might be remembering something wrong.
Its Surface transit definitely has dropped, at least downtown. I don't believe said statistic includes the regions of York, North York, Scarborough, Etobicoke, and East York — they just include old toronto's.

It's also worth noting that the 80s were definitely not Peak TTC.
 
I know we're all focused on infra, but...operations matters a ton. The TTC is staring at a giant budget hole for 2021, and this seems to be a move in the right direction by the province:


If true, hat tip to Doug Ford and Caroline Mulroney.

It is true; and I suppose I'm ok w/giving Doug some credit; but truthfully, a good deal of this is flow-through from the Feds.

It was also already budgeted; just not announced.

It certainly beats them not coming through w/the money..........but I don't think that was actually on the table.

However, all of this only starts the 2021 Fiscal year off right (which is April 1, 2021 - March 31, 2022)

But its what cities have been told (or not) is on the table for that year that really determines what is/isn't do-able.

***

I expect further help is en route; the province has well in excess of 10B already budgeted for Covid-related spending which is as yet, un-allocated; for the current fiscal year; in which there are only 3 months left.

Also, massive infra dollars are coming down the pipe early in 2021.
 
Not only will TTC see miWay move from Islington to the new Regional Hub at Kipling on Jan 4th, they will be putting the new Kiss & Ride lot into service as well about 150 parking spots on the west side of the new driveway from Dundas.

The bulk of the parking is the north lot and depending on the weather as well EllisDon, it maybe ready to open as well. Final grading is underway with work by the driveway taking place. Concrete curbs have been pour for this area and this leaves only paving and stripping.

No idea if the PPUDO will be in service on Jan 4th as well the elevator.

They are in the process of building sidewalk on the east side of the new driveway to Dundas and will be ready on Jan 4th. The west sidewalk can't be built until EllisDon move their construct trailers and equipment.

The current sidewalk south of the old Subway Ct road will be remove and riders will use the new plaza area to get to/from the station. Wonder when the street sign for Subway Ct be remove since the road doesn't exist any more.

New signs up in many places for the station with TTC, GO and miWay names on them.

Photos to follow.
 
I really hope the COVID infra spending includes dedicated funds for O&M and a stable source of long term op ex funding post pandemic. Such a crucial point, but I'm afraid it'll be lost among the big sexy type of capital projects.
 
Dec16
This is part of the Regional Hub work as while rebuilding TTC Parking lot. Lots of work still be done inside the PPUDO building
Lot more up on site
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New walkway to the station entrance with the current one being remove.
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The current old sidewalk remove from this point with new one starting here. By the looks of things, bus entrance will be widen and why the sidewalk is being move.
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TTC's proposed 2021 budget preserves priority service with no fare increase

December 17, 2020

TTC staff today released a proposed 2021 operating budget that protects service where it is needed most while remaining flexible enough to adjust service should post-pandemic demand increase. The budget proposes freezing fares next year.

"The Safe Restart funding we have secured from the federal and provincial governments has helped ensure the 2021 TTC budget protects service and puts more service on our busiest routes during the pandemic," said Mayor John Tory. "This proposed budget also keeps the cost of transit affordable by freezing fares - this is the right thing to do given the economic impact of COVID-19 on people and is one more way we can help residents get through this crisis."

"With the global pandemic having significantly reduced our revenues, this is without a doubt the most challenging budget in the TTC's 99-year history," said TTC Chair Jaye Robinson. "We know that provincial and federal supports will help offset this year's shortfall, but it's essential we plan for 2021 in a way that allows us to continue to provide demand-responsive service to those relying on us now more than ever."

The $2.15-billion operating budgets for both conventional and Wheel-Trans services envision a flatlined city subsidy of $789.8 million with additional pandemic-related costs of $796.4 million. Based on reduced ridership projections, revenues are expected to be just $566.8 million, down from last year's predicted revenues of $1.353 billion.

At the heart of the TTC's 2021 operating budget is its Demand Responsive Service Plan. Under that plan, bus service will be restored to pre-pandemic levels overall, matching capacity with demand. Streetcar, subway and Wheel-Trans service will be maintained at modified 2020 levels, while allowing for restoration to 2020 budgeted levels later in 2021 should ridership increase.

"Over the past nine months of the pandemic, the bus network has continued to be the real workhorse of the TTC, which is why it needs to be our priority for service in 2021," said TTC CEO Rick Leary. "The majority of people riding transit during the pandemic are reliant on buses more than any other mode. These are customers doing essential jobs, many of whom live in Toronto's Neighbourhood Improvement Areas. That's why we are also proposing freezing fares this year - an increase when ridership is already significantly lower than normal would disproportionately impact those customers in an inequitable way without raising significant revenues."

In addition to flexible, demand-based service, the 2021 budget includes funding for:
- Vehicle maintenance programs to ensure repairs are completed proactively prior to failure, to maintain strong, safe vehicle performance.
- Diversity and inclusion initiatives contained in the Embrace Diversity Action Plan, including enhanced training for all employees and diversity outreach programs designed to ensure that the TTC's workforce is representative of the community it serves.
- Improvements to call wait times for Wheel-Trans customers through the implementation of call overflow service.
- Provision of capacity for business continuity and emergency management operations;
- Preparation for ModernTO and cybersecurity implementation.
- Preparations for Line 5 Eglinton LRT operations, which opens in 2022.
- Other initiatives, such as work on service integration with regional partners and an automated shuttle service, helping ensure the TTC is ready for, and resilient to, changes in the future.

The 2021 staff-recommended Capital Budget is almost $1.32 billion, including $902.7 million for Infrastructure projects and $411.8 million for Vehicle projects. Consistent with the 10-year Capital Plan, more than 60 per cent is dedicated to state of good repair funding while the balance enables the TTC to begin or continue work on critical service improvement projects and complete vehicle related procurements.

This builds on important work that started in 2020 such as:
- Implementing a Fleet Procurement Strategy and Plan to procure vehicle replacements with the City's $1.1 billion in new funding: 13 of 60 streetcars; 300 of 1,422 buses; 70 of 512 Wheel Trans buses and planning for future subway train procurement;
- Beginning planning and early works for the Bloor-Yonge Capacity Improvement; Line 1 and 2 Capacity Enhancements and the ATC Line 2 capital projects.
- Accelerating critical asbestos removal to ensure ATC Line 1 installation is completed on schedule.
- Speeding up critical subway track and other SOGR work that is possible because of reduced ridership.

The TTC Board will hold a special virtual meeting regarding the 2021 Operating and Capital Budgets on Mon., Dec. 21, 2020. The meeting will begin online at 10 a.m. and be streamed live on the Official TTC YouTube Channel.

The TTC Board will conduct the meeting using an online video conferencing platform. During the COVID-19 pandemic, TTC Board meetings are being conducted by electronic means. Commissioners, TTC staff and the public are expected to participate in meetings remotely. These measures are necessary to comply with physical distancing requirements and a Provincial Order that limits public gatherings.

The public can register to make deputations by submitting a request through the online form at:

https://na01.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.ttc.ca%2FAbout_the_TTC%2FCommission_reports_and_information%2FMaking_a_deputation.jsp&data=04%7C01%7C%7C5ac45b6d8bd04c3f3e5208d8a2b9c9c3%7C84df9e7fe9f640afb435aaaaaaaaaaaa%7C1%7C0%7C637438266122744777%7CUnknown%7CTWFpbGZsb3d8eyJWIjoiMC4wLjAwMDAiLCJQIjoiV2luMzIiLCJBTiI6Ik1haWwiLCJXVCI6Mn0%3D%7C1000&sdata=UB0ryaT6AFSIUw3jluZMup8o1OIm7STD2uXrcALkcE4%3D&reserved=0

Deputations will be by way of written correspondence or by telephone only, and more information will be provided upon registration. The deadline to register is Fri., Dec. 18 at 12 noon.
 
Every time I look at this I am blown away by the complete lack of transit planning for connecting Peel region to Toronto. They spend Billions to connect Vaughn Centre (population 303,000) and extend the Yonge line to Richmond Hill. BUT NO PLANS at all for connecting Peel Region (population currently close to 1.500.000). The connecting highways - 401 and QEW- are both jammed with traffic and no connecting options being planned for. This is just unbelievable. Who makes these ridiculous decisions???

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There is as was mentioned the transitway heading to Peel from Eglinton, there is also BRT in various stages along Highway 7 to Brampton and along Dundas to Miss. the real problem is that these require transfers. They definitely should have serviceable frequencies, but they can't serve longer trips very effectively. They are a good local starting point though.

I mean the real issue here, and I dont necessarily blame you, is our inability to properly show GO on TTC and Toronto based maps.

Peel region will be served amazingly by GO RER upgrades over the next 10 years, and thats how it should be,

We shouldnt be building out TTC subways to serve regional transit, thats the purpose of GO.

Lakeshore already has 15 minute or better service, and so will Kitchener GO soon.

The coming electrification will turn GO systems into basically overground subways.

If your concern is that GO is more fare than TTC, please realize that if you were to build out the TTC network into the other regions, you can more than guarantee a fare by distance structure would be implemented on the TTC in response.

The problem is that Kitchener frequent service terminates too fare East and Milton doesn't have all day service in the near future. Even extending frequent service to Brampton GO and Cooksville would be a huge win.

Connecting "the regions" to Toronto really should be (and hopefully will be) GO RER's job - no one wants to sit on a subway train for 2 hours and 55 stops from Pickering or whatever!

This is actually a problem in China, despite all the good stuff about their subway networks they really lack express services which means crossing big cities means a long subway trip with a lot of stops, this is starting to be fixed but express services are important!
 

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