Quote:
Originally Posted by Andy6
It's perfectly reasonable to believe that opening the intersection to pedestrians will lead to significant traffic delays, more accidents and more injuries, in addition to being expensive and unlikely to produce any great benefit for downtown. It's certainly not "stupidity" and, in fact, reflects the "smart planning principles" of 40 years ago (which, at very least, leads one to suspect that planning isn't an exact science and that planners' current prescriptions ought to be taken with a grain of salt).
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Well, yes and no, but we have a study for that. And it remains but one concerns for an intersection that deals with more than just vehicle traffic.
I will agree, some planners are dolts, and I've spoken to some. However, they still held the power. Unfortunately when they're right on a critical issue, it doesn't matter.
However, as per below, planning principles or injury concern was not what brought us here anyway....
Quote:
Originally Posted by wardlow
There were at least some local planners who did not like this idea when it came up in the 1970s. Remember, this wasn't an idea drawn up by city planners or traffic engineers, it was drawn up as part of a real estate agreement between property owners wanting an underground shopping mall and the City.
This didn't reflect "smart planning principles" of 40 years ago. If it did, there would surely have been other downtown intersections in North American that were fully closed to pedestrians in the 1970s. But of course there were not.
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Bingo.
This is why the "open" side is fired up when the "closed" side brings up the traffic/safety angle... asked and answered. Next!
Quote:
Originally Posted by Stormer
Observations from afar (Regina):
I have not read the entire thread and this may have been covered, but the referendum seems like a total political abdication of responsibility. How would you feel if you lived/worked on or near an arterial street and the City decided to let the whole population vote on whether you could walk across your own street. That is not how its supposed to work.
The City administration and perhaps Council should be making these decisions, not voters. Voters should decide who is the mayor and council and hold them accountable for their decisions.
Can you imagine if they held a City-wide vote on whether a neighbourhood should get a new arena or other amenity. Would such things ever get built?
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Completely agree, especially to the bold. Bowman did this to us to get re-elected (would have, regardless).
Quote:
Originally Posted by pspeid
Exactly. It's too bad proponents of the "keep it closed" side seem to have been more interested in "winning" the debate rather than discussing it and coming to a solution that can speak to concerns of both sides (like the idea of a Fort street bus mall). Nope...they HAVE to get everything their way AND toss in personal attacks and insults along the way. I sincerely hope the next time this issue comes up the "open" side has some adults to talk to.
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I'll say it... the fort street bus mall idea is brutal in my opinion... I won't rehash it for all of our collective sanity though lol.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Ando
Ack. I'm sorry we are re-hashing all of this again. But I'm tired of hearing all of this nonsense over again about the tone of the Yes side. That's just a red herring used by people who realize they really have no substantive reason to oppose something. The whole Trump populist rhetoric is premised on opposing so-called "elitism". It saves you from actually having to come up with reasoned arguments when you don't have any.
The question hopefully will turn to what happens next. There will undoubtedly be a waiting period but it will be important to start thinking about how to get this done. Hopefully, our "elected" representatives can play their part.
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This thread should stay open for the single reason that it allows you and I to agree very strongly on a subject matter
Quote:
Originally Posted by vjose32
Couldn’t agree more
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Sorry man, but this is the problem!!!
His point was immediately and completely factually debunked in the VERY NEXT post. With facts, and not information. And you magically agree with the inaccurate position.
Not trying to be an ass, but that's exactly what just happened.
Quote:
Originally Posted by vjose32
You fail to look at the bigger traffic picture, it’s not just about the one intersection. As soon as you open up that intersection and traffic starts backing up, in all directions, it will then start to back up traffic even more at other intersections. Pretty soon that extra 5 minutes is more like 10 or 15, and a hell of a lot more in the winter. And how many people do you expect to cross that during our frozen winter? They’ll all be underground.
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You raise a very good point, but it is answered in the report, but then people get upset when an "open" person plays the "uninformed" card (though they should know how to play nice).
Quote:
Originally Posted by Ando
Might I point out that this is just turning into people with entrenched positions restating the same debate that occurred prior to the referendum? I don't see anything new here. Perhaps this thread will go the way of Skycity and Dreamscape until people have time to heal their wounds.
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Well, it's my fault... I took some days off SSP and just responded in every thread lol, ignoring the last post date prior.