It would never happen, but I wish a community (hell I wish Freddy would do it) would have the balls to experiment bringing in a European style Transit system experiment (min-hourly service 0600-0000 or so to all regions), to see how it might work and if it can be successful out here.
As for Freddy's system, they are straightening some of the routes out a little, though there are still a lot of areas underserved; as well as route options being unutilized. All buses to the North side cross Westmorland street bridge, leaving the Princess Margaret bridge unused (even though 3-4 routes go within spitting distance of that bridge). So when Westmorland Street was under reconstruction like it was this summer, the backups to the bridge threw the entire transit system's timing off for most mornings and evenings.
There are also Destination areas of the city that are unserved even now. For years, 2Nations Crossing, Bishop Drive and Hanwell Road had no service. Now, only 2NC has service; the other two areas are unserved, despite have a growing retail presence on both. With changes to Freddy's road network coming in the next few years, Bishops Drive might see some busing at least.
Freddy Transit's website does
have a link to their old (2008ish) master plan which does have a number of good ideas, but seems to have mostly been ignored. The 2NC route it advised was tried, but cancelled due to lack of use (The timings of the route were horrible). Eventually the 16 was rerouted to cover that area and it seems to work great.
When I talked to the Transport council during the open house, it seems obvious they seem a bit out of touch with the city needs. Or at least they have a big chicken and the egg problem. They didn't see access to the two big arenas the city just built as an issue, because people aren't using them to go to the arenas. (Ironically both public houses were held at those arenas, which highlighted how awkward it is to get to them by transit).
Also, as the master plan noted, but the transit council decided was a non issue, the north side has no cross-traffic. If you want to go from the North East to the North West, you have to go to Kingsplace, and cross the bridge twice to reach it. (A legacy of the Hub system we have) So when the studies show a lot of North side passengers are going to the South side, it's because it's easy to get in the mindset of "I'm already here, I might as well keep going." Granted, the North side doesn't have as good a hub location as Regent Mall serves the SOuth side, so I can see a bit of the reasoning, but it's annoying.
(Now that the buses are hourly, it's slightly better. I can catch the 13 and transfer to the 16 to get to the 2NC shopping area about 10 minutes faster than riding the 13 all the way to the end, and be confident I can catch the 16 back to transfer to the 13 home after).
It is strange that they seem determined not to bring buses near any Destinations. With the changes on Tuesday, there are no buses going near the Exhibition grounds (where the NBEx is held, and where events are often held in the arena and race track). Riders would have to walk a long block to get there now, when the bus used to go right by the North entrance.
Also if you are going to the Intracity bus station (at Smythe and Dundonald), the bus (the 13 again) turns just before it gets to the station, so you're half a block away from the nearest bus stops and have to cross at least one street.
Since hte airport is in Lincoln, bus access to the airport is right out. (And if it wasn't would be on one of those bubble routes that are on the verge of being cancelled)
Anyways, the changes taking effect on Tuesday are a good first step, but Freddy Transit needs a lot of work still, both to fill in the holes in the schedule and in the region for coverage. Sadly, from the open house discussions, I get the feeling they don't have much planned beyond what they have implemented.
*Edit* What's a bit funny is if you look at the Master Plan from 2008, they compare Freddy to "Similar Sized Transit Systems", and they include Kingston as one of them. Kingston which (I believe) is starting to do things like add BRT routes and has been (according to this thread) reinvesting in their system for years, while Freddy's has pretty much languished. We don't have the population to support BRT here regardless, but it's sad to see how we've diverged.