Fair enough. I went back and looked at the report, and the growth figures I quote in percentage terms are from the report I cited/linked to.
That report didn't have an annual figure, and I googled that, and failed to note that the number came from 2021:
View attachment 461363
You correctly note, I should have used a pre-pandemic year:
View attachment 461364
The above would attribute 80.8% of weekday ridership to rail. I'm not sure if that cleanly extrapolates to weekends.......
But assuming it did, 62.2M would the be the annual rail ridership in 2019.
Actually, I think this requires some finessing. I agree there is enormous potential in regional rail, and I have never suggested differently. And Jenn Keesmaat said she supported it as well.
But I do think we need to clarify some things here, GO's ridership, as has been noted, stays on trains over vastly greater distances, , meaning fewer actual riders (people) in terms of seat-kms.
That by the way is still a great thing, I don't want to diminish it all. I'm merely clarifying that IF the metric chosen is ridership the numbers will be somewhat lower for the reason of that long-distance from outer areas.
***
Second, thus far the province has refused to adopt GO Co-pay in the City of Toronto, or materially reduce inter-regional transit/GO long-haul fares. GO RER will certainly be able to support much higher ridership, to a point, if those things are addressed, but as yet, we do not have proof they will be.
** (FWIW, stay tuned to the provincial budget as there might just be something on this point...)
Third, even at every 5M service (which GO hasn't yet got the ability to deliver) its ridership figures will be lower for the reason of distance per rider/turnover already discussed. Which again, doesn't devalue the project in the least
I