balenciaga
Banned
With all due respect, you can't extropolate base on your own personal experiences. I know a lot of people who live near Yonge and Bloor and also work in the financial district and they regularly take the Bay bus or the subway to get to work and back. Also there are many people, elderly, disabled, who are increasingly living downtown and rely on transit to travel short distances because they physically can't walk. Yes living near work is a good thing and hopefully will encourage more people to walk, but I think it is overly simplistic to assume that the majority of people who live in the downtown core are not going to use transit regularly or not at peak hours.
Please use some basic logic and math.
I never said once moving downtown, one doesn't need to take transit any more. Of course people still use the subway and buses, just not as much as if they live in the suburbs. Do you agree?
Yes, seniors, handicapped, sick, pregnant, whatever. They always existed and will always exist. They use transit if they live in the suburbs or downtown. They don't add to our system. I don't see the point of mentioning these people. Are you suggesting if they live far away, they won't take the subway?
Ask around, if someone lives at Bay/Wellesley and work at Bay and King, what are the chances that he will take the subway/bus every day? Probably less than 20% of them will to so lazy that they can't walk for 15-20 minutes when it is not very cold. On the other hand, if they live somewhere farther away, 100% of them will have to take the subway. I have a coworker who lives at King/Shaw and still walks to the financial district to work every day.
My point is by living downtown a lot fewer people will be dependent on transit. I never said for a second downtown dwellers simply don't take subways. No one ever implied that. You are totally missing the point here. Simple math, why can't you get it?
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