Quote:
Originally Posted by miketoronto
Is commuter rail really the best use of funding?
Commuter rail, in the North American context, does very little to make transit a viable option outside of peak commuting times. Because it usually only operates at those times.
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GO and AMT answer that.
They add more trains. All of a sudden you have all day both way service. If you build it, they will come.
Look at the LIRR (Long Island Rail Road) in New York City. It is the GO on steroids. It runs 24/7.
For smaller municipalities, express buses are a good thing. Adding signal priority moves them better and attracts more riders. As ridership increases, build bus lanes and transitways.
What Ottawa did, and Mississauga and Winnipeg is doing is great. Once those Transitways get too full, then build LRT.
Subways/Skytrain are great for the larger cities.
Commuter Railis for those place with suburbs that see large numbers commuting from. Ottawa, Calgary and Edmonton are places where commuter rail would be a god place to start from next.
Regional rail, which is what the LIRR has become, and what GO is becoming Is the next step. I would not be surprised if within 20 years, GO becomes a regional rail system. I would not be surprised if the AMT also became one.
Meanwhile, there is the Greater Vancouver Area stuck in gridlock, expanding their Skytrain and those people are now stuck waiting for 2 or more trains to come to alleviate the sheer amount off people on the platform.
The Skytrain is between an LRT and a subway. It just does not have the capacity to meet demands.
By adding commuter rail lines, you give people more of a choice for getting around during peak periods. When you get near capacity, a another time for the train. Add more coaches. All of a sudden, you start growing like GO and AMT have.
How doe you convince someone to go green and leave their car at home? By giving them a comfortable way to get around. Squished in a Skytrain isn't good enough.