Quote:
Originally Posted by Large Cat
Transit users in Metro Vancouver are in no way predominantly white collar. As I've asked before, how many suits do you actually see on the Skytrain, even during weekday rush hours to downtown? I am sure white collar workers account for less than 5% of ridership, even on weekdays. The much larger percentages are to be found in: students, minimum-wage or non-office employees, seniors, disabled, and other transit-choosing adults who are going to work/friends/errands/events. I don't even know where this stereotype of white-collar transit ridership comes from...New York? Even there it would be a gross misrepresentation.
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I think you are way out in left field.
I'm sorry, but transit doesn't experience crush loads into downtown between 7 and 9am, where every single train is full to the seams because seniors are going to the library and disabled people are going someplace to 'hang. All those thousands of people trudging up the escalators at Burrard aren't on their way to work in a cellphone kiosk.
Most retail doesn't even open until 10am, and the early morning coffee shop shifts start at 5am. Since there aren't many sawmills left on the shores of False Creek, almost all those people heading downtown on the Skytrain are on their way to an office.
And yes, I do see suits on Skytrain frequently, but the thing you need to remember is people in Vancouver HATE. SUITS. The typical office attire anywhere I've worked has been shorts and tshirts.
Whenever I have a job interview in an office downtown, I always wear a suit. Not once have I been interviewed by a guy in a suit (except 1 headhunter and that wasn't for a specific position). If anything, the dresscodes have reversed and it's frontline retail and customer service who dress in business attire and office employees wear 5 days worth of Casual Fridays.
As they say, you can't judge a book by its cover, and that is especially true in Vancouver.