I appreciate your feedback TigerMaster.
There are problems with this proposal both logic and political.
Logical
The distance between Kennedy station and Scarborough is just too long to at 6.8km. By eliminating Sheppard East station, you have created a huge bottle neck north of the 401 as too many bus routes such as 85 Sheppard East, 129 Mc Cowan North, 169 Huntingwood, 130 Middlefield, 131 Nugget, 199 Finch Rocket, etc.
As much as I like the Smart track, I'm not fully convinced the section north of Kennedy Station will see the light of day when it comes to funding (at least in short term) . From my understanding yesterday, it would be just the portion between Mount Dennis and and Kennedy that will be funded in the short term.
Political
I understand that Tory wants to bring the best transit for Scarborough and I admire him for it. However that being said, I am concerned that he is setting himself up for defeat in the 2018 Municipal Election and thus his plan being dead. We have seen this before a few years ago with Miller's Transit City. Wasn't Transit City about getting the best transit across Toronto with less money? A lot of people especially in suburban Toronto are against LRTs. I know this as I live in North Scarborough and I've talked to many people about this. We know what happened in the 2010 Municipal Election with Ford winning all of the suburban ridings and cancelling Transit City on the first day he took office. Now. 4 years later in 2014 Tory wins. However, he only wins much of the Old City, eastern half of North York, southern half of Etobicoke and the Scarborough Bluffs, whereas Ford won much of Etobicoke, much of Scarborough (including my ward 39) and western half of North York. The point I am trying to make is that many people in Scarborough remain very distrustful of Tory and justifiably so. If Tory wants to gain the trust of Scarborough and given a second chance in 2018 municipal election which I'm sure he does, he should tread carefully.
Which is why I think, instead of jumping the gun by eliminating 2 out the current 3 station plan, we should look very closely at this alternative plan written by Richard Gilbert who is well-respected transportation consultant and former city Councillor of Old Toronto from 1976-91. His plan explores the R+P model (don't confuse it with Ford's understanding), the Gatineau-Hydro Corridor calls for 5 stations with potential to build development around them. We should use this model with as many transit projects across out city as possible. I posted the link in my previous post, but I will kindly post it again in case any needs a refresher.
http://www.thestar.com/opinion/comm...-better-route-for-the-scarborough-subway.html
When I look at an issue, I look at it with both logic and politics around it.