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Originally Posted by aberdeen5698
- The government has a track record of providing only the minimum funds needed. If short turning some trains means they can buy fewer trainsets at the outset, then that seems likely to happen. It's easier to do this at the outset because Langley residents will be happy to get any Skytrain service, even if it's only at relatively lower frequency.
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Point well taken. Although most of the misers are found in the provincial level - at the federal level, even the Conservatives are willing to fund transit once in a while, if only for photo ops.
Quote:
Originally Posted by aberdeen5698
- Even if enough trainsets are bought initially, ridership will grow and Translink will be forced to juggle its resources to meet demand.
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Quote:
Originally Posted by aberdeen5698
The trick is to juggle the length of time that Langley riders have to wait for the next train against the number of trains that people at Commercial/Broadway have to pass up because they're jammed full.
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Maybe, maybe not. I've had to pass up more than a few "jammed full" Canada Line trains at rush hour, and yet the line is neither at capacity, nor getting any new trains in the near future. There is a distinct lack of short-turned trains at Bridgeport.
Likewise, I don't think there's enough Surrey/Langley residents headed into Vancouver proper (more than now, anyway) to really impact the existing bottleneck at Commercial.
Also keep in mind that the Broadway extension will be opening at around the same time, which could also relieve some of the pressure there.