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  #181  
Old Posted Jan 27, 2019, 3:00 PM
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But none of those cities have a huge greenbelt that forces buses travel long distances without collecting a fare so yeah that would explain why ottawa has higher fares, I agree getting rid of zone fares was stupid but a park and ride charge is not the answer, a congestion charge is.
I don't think that really can explain that huge a discrepancy.

All cities have dead zones their transit vehicles cross through where there are no pick-ups. Crossing the Greenbelt is generally a short distance (1-3 km) and done at a speed (80 kmh) that is a lot more fuel efficient than doing the stop and go on urban roads and streets.

The real culprit for Ottawa's expensive transit fares (relative to places like Montreal and Gatineau, anyway) is likely provincial funding levels. Which would also explain why Toronto is expensive too.
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  #182  
Old Posted Jan 27, 2019, 3:10 PM
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One could argue that Mount Royal increases travel distance in Montreal so they would need to raise fares.

Greenbelt isn't that significant. It's just a couple kilometers of highway driving. A good chunk of that traveling will be replaced by trains within the next 5-10 years (yes more maintenance, but not that much).

In terms of size of urban area, Ottawa is roughly 20 km by 44 km, Edmonton is about 27 km by 30 km and Calgary 36 km by 21 km. Ottawa covers a little more distance end to end because of the Greenbelt but the city itself is denser.

Just like Truenorth00's $5 parking tax per spot per day anywhere inside the Greenbelt, you're putting the cart before the horse with the congestion charge. Before any of that can happen, you need a proper rapid transit system serving the entire city. That's why it works in those European and Asian cities. Many of them are significantly larger than us, therefore have a congestion problem. When driving is faster than transit, there is no congestion problem.

Zone based fares or park-and-ride charges ensure that those who live in the suburbs, beyond that Greenbelt, pay more in order to reduce costs for those who choose to live in the city. That's where we should start and not jump the gun to parking taxes all over or congestion charges.

When the O-Train reaches Barrhaven and Kanata, then we could talk about a congestion charge for those who commute from the big three suburbs to downtown. A rush hour only congestion charge.
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  #183  
Old Posted Jan 27, 2019, 3:37 PM
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One could argue that Mount Royal increases travel distance in Montreal so they would need to raise fares.

Greenbelt isn't that significant. It's just a couple kilometers of highway driving. A good chunk of that traveling will be replaced by trains within the next 5-10 years (yes more maintenance, but not that much).

In terms of size of urban area, Ottawa is roughly 20 km by 44 km, Edmonton is about 27 km by 30 km and Calgary 36 km by 21 km. Ottawa covers a little more distance end to end because of the Greenbelt but the city itself is denser.

Just like Truenorth00's $5 parking tax per spot per day anywhere inside the Greenbelt, you're putting the cart before the horse with the congestion charge. Before any of that can happen, you need a proper rapid transit system serving the entire city. That's why it works in those European and Asian cities. Many of them are significantly larger than us, therefore have a congestion problem. When driving is faster than transit, there is no congestion problem.

Zone based fares or park-and-ride charges ensure that those who live in the suburbs, beyond that Greenbelt, pay more in order to reduce costs for those who choose to live in the city. That's where we should start and not jump the gun to parking taxes all over or congestion charges.

When the O-Train reaches Barrhaven and Kanata, then we could talk about a congestion charge for those who commute from the big three suburbs to downtown. A rush hour only congestion charge.
Park and ride charges will only encourage people to drive and Zone based fares were already scrapped so i have no idea why this is being brought up again, there is no way the city will reinstate those fares.
European cities have much better urban planning than Ottawa does. Stockholm Sweden which has similar size in population like Ottawa has a congestion charge and it works fine there. There is no reason why Ottawa shouldn't impliment the same thing especially when there are concerns about the environment and the impending carbon taxes.
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  #184  
Old Posted Jan 27, 2019, 4:06 PM
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European cities have much better urban planning than Ottawa does. Stockholm Sweden which has similar size in population like Ottawa has a congestion charge and it works fine there. There is no reason why Ottawa shouldn't impliment the same thing especially when there are concerns about the environment and the impending carbon taxes.
You said it yourself: European cities have far better planning. This includes Stockholm.

That better planning and a bunch of other factors allow the congestion charge to work well there.

I am generally willing to give these things a shot but I am skeptical of its suitability for a city like Ottawa (at least at this point in its history) and the use of Stockholm as an example that proves it would work.

Stockholm has a number of factors that give it a much higher degree of attractivity and unavoidability, compared to Ottawa.

For starters the area where the charge is in effect is not only the downtown of the capital, it's also the downtown of the largest city in the country. For Swedes it's arguably downtown Toronto and downtown Ottawa rolled into one. Most of the mostest of the most that happens in that country happens there. It's also a totally complete downtown from A to Z. OTOH downtown Ottawa doesn't even have a hospital or a first-run movie theatre.

Don't get me wrong - I think Ottawa is a pretty darn good downtown for a North American city. But it's not strong enough IMO to take the risk of a congestion charge and the impact it might have on driving people away from it.
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  #185  
Old Posted Jan 27, 2019, 4:52 PM
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You said it yourself: European cities have far better planning. This includes Stockholm.

That better planning and a bunch of other factors allow the congestion charge to work well there.

I am generally willing to give these things a shot but I am skeptical of its suitability for a city like Ottawa (at least at this point in its history) and the use of Stockholm as an example that proves it would work.

Stockholm has a number of factors that give it a much higher degree of attractivity and unavoidability, compared to Ottawa.

For starters the area where the charge is in effect is not only the downtown of the capital, it's also the downtown of the largest city in the country. For Swedes it's arguably downtown Toronto and downtown Ottawa rolled into one. Most of the mostest of the most that happens in that country happens there. It's also a totally complete downtown from A to Z. OTOH downtown Ottawa doesn't even have a hospital or a first-run movie theatre.

Don't get me wrong - I think Ottawa is a pretty darn good downtown for a North American city. But it's not strong enough IMO to take the risk of a congestion charge and the impact it might have on driving people away from it.
This is what I find is the problem with people who live in Ottawa-Gatineau, we all want the type of transit systems that European cities have and yet we are not willing to do exact things that those European cities do that enables a good transit system.
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  #186  
Old Posted Jan 27, 2019, 11:48 PM
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This is what I find is the problem with people who live in Ottawa-Gatineau, we all want the type of transit systems that European cities have and yet we are not willing to do exact things that those European cities do that enables a good transit system.
It would be akin to switching everyone over to electric vehicles without having a network of charging stations in place. The cart before the horse.
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  #187  
Old Posted Jan 28, 2019, 12:57 AM
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This is what I find is the problem with people who live in Ottawa-Gatineau, we all want the type of transit systems that European cities have and yet we are not willing to do exact things that those European cities do that enables a good transit system.
In European cities, the transit system came first. As Acajack said, you can't put the cart before the horse.

Just look at Stockholm. How many rail lines do they have and how many enter the downtown area? How many does Ottawa have today entering downtown? How many will Ottawa have in 20 years?

If we want congestion fees, an alternative needs to exist and be accessible from all parts of the city with minimal hassle.

We have already been told. We should not expect more than the Confederation Line in our lifetimes. Ottawa cannot afford more than one line. At least, based on our current priorities. It appears that our priorities will maintain a 70 to 80% private vehicle modal share. There is really no political will to do better than that. If that wasn't the case, we wouldn't be laying off 300 bus drivers. Instead, we would re-purpose them strategically to try to increase ridership.
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  #188  
Old Posted Jan 28, 2019, 1:00 AM
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It would be akin to switching everyone over to electric vehicles without having a network of charging stations in place. The cart before the horse.
False comparison, the best transit systems have dense neighbourhoods so its you that is putting the cart before the horse not me. Density is always followed by better transit later not the other way around like you are suggesting.
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  #189  
Old Posted Jan 28, 2019, 1:17 AM
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Originally Posted by lrt's friend View Post
In European cities, the transit system came first. As Acajack said, you can't put the cart before the horse.

Just look at Stockholm. How many rail lines do they have and how many enter the downtown area? How many does Ottawa have today entering downtown? How many will Ottawa have in 20 years?

If we want congestion fees, an alternative needs to exist and be accessible from all parts of the city with minimal hassle.

We have already been told. We should not expect more than the Confederation Line in our lifetimes. Ottawa cannot afford more than one line. At least, based on our current priorities. It appears that our priorities will maintain a 70 to 80% private vehicle modal share. There is really no political will to do better than that. If that wasn't the case, we wouldn't be laying off 300 bus drivers. Instead, we would re-purpose them strategically to try to increase ridership.

Those European cities are hundreds of years old and had time to build up density so better transit had to come after. I have no idea where you get the wrong idea of transit coming before density, that is certainly not in the case of Europe and definitly not Ottawa otherwise there would be lots of density around the transitway stations already and we all know that is not the case.
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  #190  
Old Posted Jan 28, 2019, 1:28 AM
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You can't build density without transit. For example, you can't build dozens of high rises on Carling Avenue based on 15 minute transit frequency. The street would come to a grinding halt. This is why we need all these traffic studies.
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  #191  
Old Posted Jan 28, 2019, 1:34 AM
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You can't build density without transit. For example, you can't build dozens of high rises on Carling Avenue based on 15 minute transit frequency. The street would come to a grinding halt. This is why we need all these traffic studies.
Montreal Road between Rideau river and St Laurant boulevard is dense and they only get 15 min frequency. Look at how many times Uhunaiu complains and he is correct to do so. Density =/= highrises but what Ottawa has is mostly a suburban layout and then you wonder why transit is bad.
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  #192  
Old Posted Jan 28, 2019, 3:12 AM
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Strawman. Nobody ever said they built it all solely for operating cost reductions. The key driver for an LRT tunnel through the core was the removal of a capacity constraint imposed by the BRT system. The operational cost savings are a great positive outcome for OC Transpo and will help make them more financially sustainable.
If the operational costs are so great, then why are fares going up while the quality of service deteriorates?
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  #193  
Old Posted Jan 28, 2019, 3:40 AM
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Greenbelt isn't that significant. It's just a couple kilometers of highway driving.
Multiplied by thousands of runs of buses per day; those zero-revenue vehicle-miles on the Orleans, Kanata, and Barrhaven Greenbelt-crossing routes add up PDQ.
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  #194  
Old Posted Jan 28, 2019, 3:44 AM
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Stockholm has a number of factors that give it a much higher degree of attractivity and unavoidability, compared to Ottawa.

For starters the area where the charge is in effect is not only the downtown of the capital, it's also the downtown of the largest city in the country. For Swedes it's arguably downtown Toronto and downtown Ottawa rolled into one. Most of the mostest of the most that happens in that country happens there. It's also a totally complete downtown from A to Z. OTOH downtown Ottawa doesn't even have a hospital or a first-run movie theatre.

Not quite apples:apples, but the biggest factor in the Ottawa:Stockholm comparison, like almost any other comparison of a North American and European city, is population density: even after hiving off the rural townships of Ottawa, the population density of the "urban" portion of Ottawa is half that of metro Stockholm.
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  #195  
Old Posted Jan 28, 2019, 3:45 AM
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This is what I find is the problem with people who live in Ottawa-Gatineau, we all want the type of transit systems that European cities have and yet we are not willing to do exact things that those European cities do that enables a good transit system.
Not only that, if you, as the local government or a developer in Ottawa, dare propose anything that would remotely make Ottawa more like a European city, people lose their shit.
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  #196  
Old Posted Jan 28, 2019, 11:00 AM
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Not only that, if you, as the local government or a developer in Ottawa, dare propose anything that would remotely make Ottawa more like a European city, people lose their shit.
Yep I agree.
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  #197  
Old Posted Jan 28, 2019, 1:13 PM
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Originally Posted by J.OT13 View Post
Even when it comes to cost, OC Transpo can't compete.

Transit passes and single trips are so expensive, it's cheaper to drive or take an Uber as soon as two people share a trip.
Just fuel for me would be more than my Monthly pass.

Fuel / Month $120
Parking / Month $90 and up

Not including oil changes and windshield washer fluid I would pay $100/ per month more than my $117 bus pass. It is hard to argue with single day passes as well but if you have 2 people traveling then the car is probably best.
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  #198  
Old Posted Jan 28, 2019, 6:21 PM
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If the operational costs are so great, then why are fares going up while the quality of service deteriorates?
1) Because the LRT isn't in operation yet.

2) The cost savings of the LRT aren't enough to offset a lot of other issues driving up cost from the cost of fuel and labour to service demand.

You are seeing the effects of sprawl first hand. Rail investment can't keep up with how far the city's suburban boundaries are growing. And despite the central corridor starting to be addressed (with the Confederation Line), we'll continue to face tons of demand for feeder buses in the suburbs. And shuttling around 50 pax at a time on a bus, with an operator who makes a living wage isn't exactly very efficient.

Why do you think I keep railing against sprawl? It's a losing battle for transit if the settled area boundary keep pushing outward.
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  #199  
Old Posted Jan 28, 2019, 6:48 PM
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I commute to work with my girlfriend. Two transit passes today (before the scheduled increase) would be $233 vs. the $210 we pay for parking. Including gas, driving is a little more expensive, but it's worth it for the convenience (medical appointments, groceries, after work plans, overtime...)
Two points here.

First, I get that it's normal to completely discount the cost of maintenance and depreciation on their vehicle, but it doesn't make the comparison accurate or truthful. How much does an oil change cost on your vehicle and how often do you do one? Next, do you not change your tires every few years? And unless you're only driving a few kms, the cost incurred is much more than a few $'s per month in gas. Say 15 km each way. And you have an efficient car that averages 7 L/100km. If gas costs $1.25/L, you're burning over $50 in gas per month.

All that said, it's reasonably justifiable for two people to share a vehicle to commute. The real goal should be getting most of those single commuters to switch to transit.

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When transit passes are too expensive, the solution isn't raising the price of parking. Other than Toronto and Vancouver (outside Zone 1), Ottawa has by far the most expensive transit fares in the country. That needs to change.
This is a ridiculously Canadian/American POV. In the rest of the developed world charging congestion fees or parking taxes is perfectly normal. They attach a cost to sprawl and you pay whether you take transit or drive. It's just worse for drivers.

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And charging a flat parking tax everywhere inside the Greenbelt when most of that area is poorly served by transit doesn't make sense either.
Agreed. So put on the parking tax and use that money to boost feeder bus frequencies inside the Greenbelt.
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  #200  
Old Posted Jan 28, 2019, 6:54 PM
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Drivers have this weird habit of assuming that the cost of driving is just gas, leaving out wear & tear and mechanical expenses, which are directly related to how much is driven, and thus incur a cost per kilometre.
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