smallspy
Senior Member
People who live south of 7 try to avoid the double fare by driving to Finch, walking to Steeles or otherwise taking TTC on border routes instead of paying $4 to take a YRT bus that runs right outside their home.
I doubt there's any way to know the actual numbers but I wouldn't be surprised if YRT has some sort of internal guess. With a different fare structure, there would be fewer people riding (For example) the 53 and 60 TTC routes and more on the local YRT routes, Viva etc. There's a definite financial impact, negatively for YRT and positively for TTC, right in the area that should be YRT's breadbasket.
But unless those people are riding along Steeles - and if you're reaching all the way up to Highway 7, they're not - they have to pay two fares regardless of whether it is a TTC bus or a YRT bus picking them up. This has nothing to do with the TTC, and everything to do with the political boundaries.
And for the record, I don't think that the number is nearly as high as you think it is. Ridership on the contracted TTC routes north of Steeles is pretty good. I take the 68 every day, and there is a good number of people who get off at Denison - only 850 metres north of Steeles. Prior to this I took the 35 Jane bus north of Steeles, and there were a lot of people getting on in the afternoons at Interchange Way.
Short of suggesting that we merge all of the locaal transit systems together, what do you suggest as a solution?
Dan
Toronto, Ont.