Quote:
Originally Posted by Joseph Potvin
It appears that the trajectory of interaction in this discussion thread has narrowed to a few people defending the following uncompromising positions:
1. Against urban-rural and interprovincial transit integration in the GNCR
2. Regional transit system design that would require alteration in the CIty of Ottawa's current plans is impossible
3. Against novel developments in transit finance
Moose Consortium Inc. and related companies are:
1. For urban-rural and interprovincial transit integration in the GNCR
2. Regional transit system design that would require alteration in the CIty of Ottawa's current plans is possible
3. Pursuing a novel development in transit finance
Did I miss anything crucial?
Joseph Potvin
Director General | Directeur général
Moose Consortium (Mobility Ottawa-Outaouais: Systems & Enterprises) | www.letsgomoose.com
Consortium Moose (Mobilité Outaouais-Ottawa: Systèmes & Enterprises) | www.onyvamoose.com
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You have an amazing ability to mischaracterize other people's posts. So I'll break it down one by one.
"1. Against urban-rural and interprovincial transit integration in the GNCR"
Not against. In favour of a realistic plan and specific details.
"2. Regional transit system design that would require alteration in the CIty [sic] of Ottawa's current plans is impossible"
Statement meant to distract. Will a member of City Council bring forward the Moose Proposal to be debated on by Council? Will there be public meetings and deputations? A City staff report? You know, the usual process for how any other decision is made? If the democratically-elected City Council decides to alter their own approved plans, as has been the case in other municipalities, they have that ability. Have they made any moves to do that yet? As best I can tell, no, they haven't. Does anyone here predict they will before the next municipal election? Is someone anticipating a swell of municipal candidates to replace the current Council members who will be in favour of the Moose proposal?
"3. Against novel developments in transit finance"
Novel? How did Mayor Tory's novel idea to fund Smart Track from the private sector work out? Transit in North America requires a public subsidy for operations. Ontario, through Infrastructure Ontario, already uses Alternative Procurement Financing (AFP), where the private sector takes on some financial risk and in some cases is the operator. The operations still require a subsidy because none of the transit lines make money, and why should they? It's a public service.
If the novel approach was really going to work, why hasn't it already been implemented in other jurisdictions? Why hasn't a single member of Ottawa City Council had the courage or will to move a motion to support the novel approach? Why haven't the provincial or federal governments agreed to it? Instead, they've agreed to fund what the City wants and through a model they've used for other Ontario and Canadian cities.
Go ahead. Be my guest. Have all the novel approaches you want. At the end of the day it still requires some level of political support or vote, and that hasn't been the case yet. But maybe this will become a 2018 municipal issue and Moose will registered as a third party to try and influence voters to support their idea.
"Moose Consortium Inc. and related companies are:
1. For urban-rural and interprovincial transit integration in the GNCR"
The private sector lobbies for things all the time. This is no different than any other industry, industry lobby group, or group of businesses that want something. It's not new or surprising.
"2. Regional transit system design that would require alteration in the CIty of Ottawa's current plans is possible"
Of course it's possible to change a transit plan. Brampton, Hamilton, Toronto, Mississauga, Ottawa itself. They've all done it. No one is saying it can't legally or procedurally be done. The question is, should it be done? Is the alternative better? How do voters and transit riders get a say?
"3. Pursuing a novel development in transit finance"
Go for it. Lots of people pursue lots of great ideas. The key question is what the public sector, public dollars, public assets are being asked to do in return for this "novel development". That is still not clear.
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On a separate note, still no CTA ruling yet it looks like. Yet planning, design, and the timing of when the RFP will be issued for Phase 2 continues on.