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Originally Posted by DubberDom
LRT/Suzie.
Thanks for the great points. I'm no civil engineer, so what I say is mainly based upon what I see. The "Express" service is one of the main contributors to Ottawa's relatively high public Transit usage. We are going to ask riders to make 1-2 transfers whereas today they need not make any. How will this impact ridership?
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You might want to check the facts before you write...
Express passes account for 4% of ridership. On top of this, there might be some express users buried in the Ecopass (14.5%, likely) and tickets (21.4%, less likely). Interpreted generously, expresses make up maybe 12% of ridership.
The notion that expresses are responsible for Ottawa's relatively high transit usage is just another aspect of the Transitway Mythology.
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Also, during the 3 years of construction, the transitway as we know if will be closed. How many people will endure this? How many people will find alternate ways of commuting and never come back, especially when the new service will be inferior to the existing Express Service?
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By the time we get light rail running, most of the whinging bus lovers of Andy Haydon's generation will be retired.
The far more well-travelled generation that is following them will be glad to have a system that finally starts to look vaguely like what most European cities half Ottawa's size already have. Never mind Ottawa aspiring to be Vancouver or Toronto or Paris or London, aspiring to be like Dresden or Newcastle (off the top of my head) in terms of rapid transit would be improvement.
And if we didn't have a bunch of BRT nuts in charge of things, we could probably get conversion done a lot faster than three years. Calgary is building a whole new light rail line of similar length right now with elevated sections (including an elevated station), tunnels (including a tunnelized station) and interchange reconfigurations and it's due to be completed in the same amount of time.
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Originally Posted by DubberDom
In all the projected revenue models, what rate did they use to come up with the figures? Since LRT's Hub & Spoke model will essentially eliminate the Express service, will everybody's passes cost $22.50 less per month (Reg vs Express pass). Although the Express service may seem less efficient, they also do generate more revenue.
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Express passes nominally generate more revenue, but expresses cost a lot more to run, too. Despite the higher charge for express passes, they don't pay their way relative to other routes. Admittedly, the same is probably true for the trans-Greenbelt 90&100-series buses on their trans-Greenbelt portions, but they also get better loadings and better utilization rates so how the two route types compare in terms of carrying extra-Greenbelt passengers in the end is a good question.
My guess is that in the post-LRT inauguration era extra-Greenbelt local services and expresses will be merged to run across to the nearest LRT terminal. We're already seeing some of this in places like Blackburn Hamlet. They make take the opportunity to change some of the fare structures.
I do share some concerns about having a rail system limited to within the Greenbelt. We're just wasting money sending scores of buses across the Greenbelt all the time, and, moreover, once LRT finally extends across the Greenbelt the local extra-Greenbelt routes will have to be chopped back to what they were originally.