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Originally Posted by nname
quantity > quality 
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Actually I feel it's the sway of Watts and everyone's ability to hide the serious LRT business case shortfalls
The funny thing is, the new report shows that the LRT1 capital cost has ballooned to $2.44 billion. I ran a calculation and when 20-year operating costs are considered, it actually now
costs less to extend the Expo Line both to Langley AND to Newton than to build this LRT.
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It seems like all stakeholders involved just want to build an LRT line for the sake of completing a project in Surrey
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This. The South of Fraser's whole gripe is the years and years of having no projects completed here - and I'm really sad that it's gone to the point where everyone's now rooting for a project that isn't really the most efficient use of people's money, but apparently brings the most "rail". The whole report downplays the difference between at-grade (LRT) and grade-separated (SkyTrain), as if the difference were nonexistent. It doesn't inform us that 96 B-Line riders are only saving <5 minutes end-to-end or that the ridership could've been better with the other (SkyTrain) alternative.
I'm betting on these reasons: Watts at the helm, and the LRT-motivated city staff I have spoken to many times also... being at the helm. They believe in at-grade just a little too much. I have spoken with several city staff who were actually working to try and shift things towards LRT. With this setup of people, nothing else gets through in spite of the practicality.
Honestly, from this vantage point, I find the whole thing to be so politically-motivated. It's not just the Surrey LRT, which I've always had a gripe with, that I have an issue with in this plan. I can see much better progress throughout the region if many of these proposed B-Lines were first introduced as 43-like peak hour/weekday express routes. At the end of the day, on many of these corridors, for the cost of the express route every 10 minutes + local every 15 minutes in the evening, you could run the local every what, 6 minutes - and having the more frequent local setup is actually faster for people. If the corridor anchors don't have much of a regional pull OR there are currently good alternatives, that corridor usually doesn't warrant much of an express service off-peak. I mean, look at the 130. Now only every 30 minutes after 9:30, and for good reasons.
In the spirit of good transit planning and being efficient with our money, I'm hoping that whatever gets implemented in the next 30 years ends up looking nothing like this and is controlled a bit. $7.5 + $600m yearly is lots of money they want to throw at transit - and I think it can do more.