Montreal truly is making excellent progress and there unlike here doesn't treat the word "subway" like it's a dirty term. They embrace grade separated transit whole hog.
It's been over 35 years since the 5-station Blue Line 5 extension to Anjou was announced, with re-announcements in 1988, 1989, 1998 (but only one station to Pie-IX), 2013, and 2016. And that's probably missing a few, including the earlier announcement about it going to Montreal-Nord instead (which was replaced by the aborted White Line 7).
The core the the REM service is the 1950s proposed Line 3
Yes, they are making progress, but let's not start suffering from "grass is always greener" syndrome.
Montreal Metro isn't perfect, but it's way better ran than the TTC subway, by a mile
It has positives and negatives. I don't think building the trains so narrow is an advantage in the long-term - it's got the same issues you have in London.
fyi, born and raised in Montreal, I know that system inside out and despite it's issues, I've never been this frustrated like the TTC subway has made me so many time.
I was there for the best part of the 1980s. I used to be very frustrated by long waits and travel times, to go only a few stations, waiting endlessly for trains - 10 minutes here, and 15 minutes there, in the evening. Then - and still now, the entire system only goes about 5 km west of downtown, to Angrignon. It still fails to get west of Decarie, north of the escarpment. And the lack of wheelchair accessibility for almost all the stations in this day and age, is beyond pathetic - good grief not even at a major interchange station like Vendome, which is a rare station where you can simply drop elevators in without much complexity. The poor integration of STM metro and bus service at major hubs is embarrassing. And then, in my youth at least, was having to head to the Metro shortly after 12:30 AM to go home from the bars, which closed at 3 AM - presumably they've fixed that at least now - my days of such things are long past me!
Even now, the buses aren't air conditioned - and the subway certainly wasn't - I assume the new Azur cars are though - I've only ridden in the winter.
I really just wish Montreal would release ridership data per line. Toronto also needs to give out more recent statistics.
Who would've thought...they have their stubway, yet they don't bitch about it.
They do release data for each station. Which again have me scratching my head, as not as high as I'd think (even when remembering they only count entrances, not exits, so multiply by two to compare to TTC data). So pretty easy to figure out approximate ridership for a 3-station line, when no-one the middle station - particularly in rush-hour.
APTA ridership data for both systems is released quarterly.
http://www.apta.com/resources/statistics/Pages/ridershipreport.aspx