DavidH
Senior Member
Some of you may recall that I wrote a "Durham Transit Review" blog for several years before I ran out of energy (read that as "got tired of having little positive to say").If Durham Transit gets real in terms of service maybe?
To be honest, I think their BRT is a joke. The money was there, and they simply took the opportunity with little motivation other than "it's there so why don't we do it?" There wasn't any "we should be fighting to get people out of their cars and increase density!" like York thought, and they're continuing to push towards being a (backwards) sprawling suburban region.
But in fairness, they were pushing for the BRT for several years before Metrolinx included it in the plan and funded the first phase. The problem was that they wanted the money without doing the required preparatory work. The specific scenario is in fact the opposite of the one you described. In general, though, my sense is that Durham Council is all in favour of better transit provided someone else is paying for it.
My problem with the BRT is that the original full plan was to widen Highway 2 *without* putting in physical barriers, but to simply mark the bus lanes with pavement markers. In other words, to use transit as an excuse to fund a general road widening. However, in discussions I've had with DRT and Metrolinx staff, this is under review and the final plan may well be different.
DRT is currently performing a long term transit service study and there are open houses in about a month to show options for public review. We'll get a better idea then where Durham is going, in terms of the Highway 2 BRT, other corridors, and general transit improvements I'm on a community advisory committee for it so I should see some details around October 20th; I'll report back here.
As a side note, DRT was looking at restructuring its Ajax and Pickering routes into a more grid-oriented fashion in 2010. I have no idea of how far they've gotten with this, but 2010 service plan information should start going to committee next month so we'll likely hear then.
You're certainly right that the regional level isn't really looking at densifying. Some of the municipalities are (e.g. Ajax is expropriating a parcel of land near its downtown because they want significantly higher densities than the owner was proposing) but the regional level of government is still very pro-developer.
Anyone interested in WHY Durham is enamoured of cars should take a close look at the Ipsos-Reid "Foundational Study" performed for Metrolinx when they were just starting up. Durham residents are *least* concerned about traffic congestion of any in the GTA. This may be because the major wave of development is just now coming to Durham, but in general they are a pretty happy bunch in the cars. There is really little motivation yet for a serious change.
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