Again, is the existing subway not a method for individuals to get in and out of the downtown?
The subway is
a way to get in and out of downtown, but not for everyone.
I've always found this to be a "let them eat cake" kind of position. Not in a nasty way, but in the way Marie Antoinette, upon being told the people had no bread, reputedly helpfully suggested "Qu'ils mangent de la brioche", not understanding that brioche was even
more expensive. She didn't live in their world. She didn't get it.
I don't live particularly close to a subway. If I pretty much have to get in the car to get to a subway, and likely pay to park, I might as well just keep going. Hundreds of thousands of us face that reality every day. That, too, needed to be addressed in the 1960s and 1970s, but the city and Metro screwed the pooch on the promise of alternatives to expressways as well. Once they'd ashcanned the expressways and the pressure was off, they put their feet up on their desks, and the mantra became "mañana".
As for trucks, they already have the 401, 427, DVP and the Gardiner.
Well, that's true, but it's also true that if you're heading north up the middle of town, and there's an awful lot of business up the spine of Yonge Street, the lack of a relatively quick way in and out of downtown in the middle of things puts needless traffic on the Gardiner to get to and from the DVP and 427. It also puts that traffic on those highways (and potentially the 401 as well) when it properly belongs on a direct north-south route. We'd still have traffic on those roads even with the Spadina the way it was planned, but that much less. I can see not having the Richview and Crosstown expressways, but I think we really should have finished the Spadina and the Scarborough expressways before we dusted our hands and invoked closure. I think if we had, we would have had a complete set of controlled access roads to circumvent being on surface streets until you were actually in the vicinity of where you needed to actually get. I realize I'm crying for the moon at this point, but I don't think the right decisions were made in the 1960s and 1970s on either the expressways that were and weren't a good idea, and the buck that was passed and passed and passed on subways for generations, till now financing them is just short of a moon shot program.
If we need to invest in anything, its more effective transit; the DRL, and LRTs on the Waterfront and Jane. This would go a long way to inproving transit times, pulling people out of their cars and providing more room on our existing streets for trucks.
That's pretty much what we're down to, at this point. But I'd like to stress that it isn't, and never was, a one-size-fits-all prospect. I know I risk being pilloried for saying so, but the reality is that for millions of people, driving remains their best, cheapest, and quickest option, even with all the traffic. When I lived near the subway, I took it, and was glad not to have to drive. But the subway didn't follow me when I moved. Roads go everywhere. Subways don't. LRTs don't. Even buses don't. If you live near one, as I did, they're great, I agree. But the city needed to take the interests of
other people into account, and it didn't, and now we have one of the worst transportation situations in North America because we couldn't find a sensible middle line between Jane Jacobs and Robert Moses. We nearly did. Nearly. Too late now.