hipster duck |
Dec 29, 2014 4:20 PM |
Quote:
Originally Posted by Nouvellecosse
(Post 6858199)
No one's on a high horse; some of you are just being irrational in the way you're reacting to someone because they're saying something you'd rather not hear. He never made any claims about the travel patterns of anyone else but himself - it was other people like yourself who fancy themselves as mind readers regarding the larger business traveling public. But it's always possible to be wrong when it comes to speculating about third parties. Yet he's an actual out-of-towner who visits for business so regardless of how similar or different he is from other such people, you have the perspective of one such person at your disposal.
|
In order to understand why some Torontonians are very defensive of the fares, you have to understand the context.
For years, the fare of the Union Pearson Express was not revealed and many speculated - from offhand remarks - that it would be exorbitant; somewhere north of $30. The original proposal was called "Blue 22" because it was supposed to take 22 minutes and cost $22. That was over ten years ago, so people basically thought that that was the lowest the price could ever be and, because of inflation, it was almost certainly more.
Much to the surprise of many, the prices were revealed this past month to be quite reasonable: $19 if you have a Smart Card (which is an incentive to ride more public transit when you get to your destination), $10 for airport workers. Even the $27 fare for people who don't buy and use a Smart Card is somewhat reasonable for your average business traveler.
Despite this revelation, a lot of Torontonians still took to newspaper message boards to moan about how this was some sort of luxury service and how the prices were unreasonable because they weren't the same as basic public transit, etc. It grew very tiresome. Lost in all this rhetoric was a realization that the upgraded rail corridor won't just be used by the airport rail link, but is necessary for future public transit improvements along the corridor. Also lost in all the mud-slinging was the fact that the existing public transit connections to the airport aren't getting axed; in fact, they are getting upgraded (the TTC bus will get a new branding, its own line on the subway map, and luggage racks). Finally, as Caltrane mentioned, the price isn't set in stone. If it isn't profitable, the private company that runs this service can always lower the fare or tinker with incentives. Suggesting that the service will be of limited use because people with bags still have to get to their final destination is a moot point. No train will do that for you. That hasn't prevented rail links in other cities from being profitable and well used.
This isn't a case of Torontonians slavishly defending a project because it happens to be in Toronto. In fact, many of the forumers who are defending this project were harshly critical of the price of UPx up until 3 weeks ago when the actual fares were revealed. In light of this, I think most of the Toronto forumers here are actually being quite rational about this.
|