Quote:
Originally Posted by J.OT13
It's always been that way, even when Ottawa had a more progressive City Halls compared to Toronto. Stage 1 and 2, City of Ottawa got less than 33% funding. In fact, City of Ottawa had to pay 50% for Stage 2 ultimately. Meanwhile, the City of Toronto and GTA have continuously received 100% upper level funding for subway lines and commuter rail.
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I'll definitely admit that Toronto gets favoured by higher governments than Ottawa when it comes to money for transit expansion, but I think the roots of that kind of snuck up on higher governments, rather than Toronto being automatically the darling of premiers and prime ministers.
The government of Ontario created GO transit because Toronto extended over multiple regions/counties and there was a clear need for some kind of regional transit provider. As the suburban regions expanded and there was a need for even more regional transit and system integration, Metrolinx was created and swallowed GO. After that, Metrolinx took on a bit of a life of its own, eventually becoming the main stakeholder in building rapid transit of any kind even if it was wholly within a single municipality and didn't really serve any regional travel needs (e.g. Finch LRT).
Since Ottawa's entire metropolitan region on the Ontario side is wholly within what was formerly Ottawa-Carleton, there was never a need to create a parallel agency to OC Transpo to deliver regional transit.
Ottawa is even worse off since 1/4 of the metro population lives in Quebec and the provinces don't coordinate with each other. In any other Canadian city, a LRT connecting Gatineau to downtown Ottawa would have made the Phase 2 priority list and would be u/c by now. In Washington DC, the Federal government by act of Congress created WMATA (operator of the Washington Metro) as a pact between the District, Virginia and Maryland to ensure that the metro system actually served regional needs. This is not on the Feds' radar, but ideally STO and OC Transpo could be merged into something like this.