Quote:
Originally Posted by kaiserLDN
I think we need a thread about parking downtown so I will start one here.
Should Farhi be forced to sell his parking lots?
Should Farhi build a parking garage with all his money?
Why should the downtown merchants complain about lost parking when they could be building towers around them that could feed them costumers such as in bigger cities?
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I've got a better idea. Force Impark to sell all of its downtown lots back to the city. The city can then create parking lots where people can actually afford to park. Those pirates at Impark are gouging Londoners because they know they can get away with it; the city profits because each one of the Impark lots generates property taxes, so it won't bring Impark to heel.
After the lots revert back to city ownership, the city can then sell the lots to developers to build on with the proviso that they must build in above-ground or underground parking lots and charge affordable rates.
A city London's size should not be adopting Toronto-style, laissez-faire parking policies that benefit only the rich and the parking lot owners and drive everyone else out of the core. I'm lucky that I found a cheap lot to park in through some connections, but non-city-operated parking in the core is getting stupidly expensive.
This is a big reason why a lot of London businesses left the downtown core in the first place - parking was getting too scarce and expensive. And why pay to park so you can shop downtown when you can just go to a mall or somewhere else in town and get free parking??
I would bet anyone dollars to donuts that former mayor Fontana had something to do with Impark's invasion of the downtown core - with appropriately greased palms along the way.
The city is dreaming, in Technicolor, if it thinks that someday it can build a public transit system that will make it easy, convenient and cheap for Londoners who work downtown to give up their cars. While I support BRT, the kind of public transit system that is needed to get people out of their cars is a long, long way off. Such a system will have to beat cars in terms of comfort, quality, speed and convenience first. Until that day, allowing parking to get scarcer and more expensive is just going to piss people off, royally.
I live near Wharncliffe and Base Line Road, and on a good day when traffic isn't too bad, it takes me between five and seven minutes to get to the lot downtown where I park. On the way home, it takes somewhat longer due to rush hour traffic and gridlock on Wharncliffe.
If I took a bus to work, it would take me much longer to get to work and get home because the bus is slower and will force me to be at work 15 minutes earlier than I need to, and force me to wait 15 minutes after work just to be able to catch a bus that will get me home.
Because I have a car, I don't have to adjust my schedule to fit someone else's dictates, I simply hop in the car and go. And I don't have to put up with the discomfort of standing around in inclement weather conditions waiting for a bus that may or may not get to my stop on time.