Quote:
Originally Posted by J.OT13
My point about suburban transit might not have been as clear as I had hoped. Of course we need to serve the suburbs, but the suburbs often times can be served adequately with simple, cheap, commuter rail (I'm thinking more high quality, high frequency GO Transit in the GTHA more than the limited AMT in Montreal). The fact is, most suburbanites only use transit to get in and out of the city during the week, and not as a way to get around evenings in weekends, so investing in high capacity subways/metros doesn't make sense.
In the case like Ottawa however, many tracks were removed over the years and commuter rail would serve small villages far from the more developed Ottawa-Gatineau area, encouraging sprawl. So metro grade LRT is the only path forward.
That said, the urban cores are often neglected because they just represent a handful of wards/ridings/boroughs as opposed to the suburbs which are often dozens. Easier and cheaper (per kilometer) to get votes.
The fact is, Line 1 in Toronto is way overcapacity, so the DRL should be top priority. In Ottawa, Bank Street, Rideau and Montreal, the densest corridors in the city, are very narrow and congested. Buses are ridiculously unreliable (should be every 15 minutes but we usually wait 40 minutes before a couple buses arrive at once). Those corridors should at the very least be studied along with the suburban lines.
We need a balance. We need unelected bodies to study the transportation needs and come up with a priority list presented to the public. Elected officials cold then choose the ones they want, but at least the public would know what is actually needed and not what the politicians tell them is needed.
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That isn't true at all though, partly, but not entirely, for the reasons you have said. 'Commuter rail' is neither simple nor cheap, and the only Canadian cities (Toronto and Montreal) where it approaches those criteria already have systems in place, and are developing them further - but neither cheaply nor simply.
Railways in Canada are owned by monopolies, not the people. For that reason alone (though there are others), it will never be simple or cheap to build commuter rail here. Those monopolies want as much control of those railways as they can, prioritising their freight over passenger services, and where they do give a little, it will be at a price favourable to them and not to us.
So it is usually easier to build brand new systems than attempt to use existing railways. Along with the previous reason, there is also the fact that the monopolys' infrastructure is poorly maintained crap unsuitable for moderate speed passenger rail and unelectrified, so we either accept crappy service or pay CP/CN to upgrade the line at great expense.
Oh yeah, and because of North America's moronic FRA rules, we can't use proper, nice passenger trains here and are forced to use monstrous, inefficient tanks instead.
Simple and cheap - you must be joking! So many reasons why it is neither.