But Milton and Sarnia are 2 completely different towns that are 2.5 hours apart. We're not talking about 2 isolated towns, we're talking about a continuous and integrated metro area, where the line between 1 municipality and another is usually completely arbitrary.
Tell me, where is the Toronto/York Region border?
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Unless you're someone who knows Toronto's layout in and out, and is able to identify Steeles Avenue on a map, there is absolutely nothing that indicates that Steeles is a municipal border, or that north and south of that street are somehow to completely separate cities with separate interests and needs. To any layman, these two areas look exactly the same, are part of the same city. As such the idea that transit planning and operation should be handled at a regional level that transcends arbitrary municipal borders should frankly be common sense. This isn't the 80s anymore, the world doesn't end at Steeles Avenue. There are millions of people that live outside the city of Toronto, commute to Toronto on a daily (or many times per week) basis, rely on city services, and use city transportation especially the TTC. There are many Mississauga residents that use Line 2, and there are many, and I mean MANY York Region residents that use Line 1 to commute to work daily. This idea that TTC and especially the subway only exists to serve Toronto residents is outdated, and hasn't been true for 3-4 decades now.