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Originally Posted by Dupcheck
True for now, but Ottawa is in the middle of nowhere, and they mostly employee government workers, which mainly spend money collected from taxes. London is located strategically in the main transport trade corridor between US and Ontario and it is growing economically and geographically everyday!
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If high speed rail is ever built between Toronto and Windsor/Detroit, having an LRT link between a high-speed station in London and various points in the city will be important. Ottawa's LRT connects with that city's VIA station.
There was a recent report from TD Economics that showed that 70% of all tech jobs in Canada are located in cities that together make up only 43% of Canada's population - Toronto, Montreal, Ottawa, Calgary, and Vancouver. This report also applauded Kitchener-Waterloo for a high amount of growth in this sector, and it specifically credited that city's LRT investment with helping to increase tech employment. The report goes on to say that other cities need to make similar investments if they don't want to get left behind, as has already happened in the United States where tech jobs are even more heavily concentrated in only a few cities and the rest of the country is stuck with low-paying service jobs. London has been moving in that direction for the better part of 15 years, but it's not too late for the city to embrace change and avoid becoming an economic backwater.
At least London is taking a positive step with BRT, but it's going to have to be upgraded to LRT in the future. London isn't going to have a choice.