TJ O'Pootertoot
Senior Member
I can agree with this. I feel that part of the reason the subway is being demanded is because they knew well all those condos would put more people on the road then Yonge between Steels and 7 could handle. I feel like the TTC is being backed into a corner because of this.
No, you've got the history all backwards. Really, someone else can write a history of Langstaff if they want. But, in short: It was ID'd as a regional node more than 20 years ago, it was listed as an urban growth centre in Places to Grow and then an anchor mobility hub in the Big Move. The subway was announced in 2007. It is BECAUSE of all that that they are putting the density there, not the other way around. Given how small the piece of land is, and the road capacity constraints, I doubt they can make enough money on it without the density, but that's the new normal all over south York Region and other burbs too. As I said, they did NOT look at the road network and then figure out what transit could handle, they STARTED with the assumption that all this transit would handle most of the transpo needs and the roads would pick up some slack, which is precisely the inverse of these things usually work. Without all those other factors, there is no way someone would have dreamed of putting condos there and when someone like Peter Calthorpe is amazed at the convergence of transit, I think it's worth taking note.
(As for the interim train stations; Langstaff won't be empty because thousands who now drive to Finch will park there AND it's the point of highest density in Langstaff; up to 50 storeys is the zoning there, so fear not. Clark won't be at that level, obviously, but there will be buses feeding in and definitely more intensification along Yonge. They already cut out Royal Orchard, which was the wise move.)
As for TTC being backed into the corner, I would concur to the extent that it is a "regional" priority rather than a "local" one (or at least a "Toronto") one but then the debate over Scarborough and the DRL and, even still, Finch and Sheppard, suggests to me that Toronto doesn't have the firmest grasp on their own priorities anyway. And, ironically, it was only because of the EA for the Yonge extension that the TTC went, "Oh, I guess we really do need this DRL thing..." That doesn't mean it's a bad idea at all; I can understand why TTC doesn't give a crap what goes on across Steeles but all this local/regional stuff comes back to The Big Move and the evaluations of it and why Metrolinx is needed in the first place.
So, pardon me if I'm being vociferous but, as you can see, there are something like 20,000 housing units that are DIRECTLY contingent on the subway (and its integration with a bunch of other transit projects) and if people want to argue for keeping it at Finch or Steeles, or saying TO taxpayers shouldn't fund it or whatever, they should understand what's at stake. We should be rewarding Markham for something like this instead of driving a line into Scarborough hoping their planning will catch up to the subway they ostensibly "deserve."
I don't think "Toronto taxpayers" should have to pay the costs; there should be (as I said earlier) a totally new Metrolinx board, a totally new fare system and a totally new and equitable means of funding transit projects in Toronto and the region. This one should be at the top of the list and if it's not, all these plans we've been discussing aren't worth the paper they're printed on.
In my humble opinion.
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