Given scarberiankhatru's membership in SOS, do you need an answer?
I have nothing to do with SOS, twerp. It's not the plan I'd build.
Your forgetting that David Miller campaigned on exapnding surface LRT in 2006; and explicity discussed LRT instead of subway on Sheppard East during the election. Isn't a mayoral election exactly the place to debate it?
The Waterfront West LRT was discussed long before Transit City, and the Don Mills EA started in ... what ... 2002? 2003? Eglinton isn't exactly a new concept. The election was in fall 2006; after being re-elected on this issue, he moved in early 2007 to start the process. Would you have preferred he would have simply have studied it for five years, and built nothing?
You're.
Studied
what for five years? What a stupid statement. No, I'd rather they study "it" for 10 years and then build nothing.
Why would nothing have been built? Even if we ended up with only half the funding that was announced, that could build an entirely different set of projects. Jane sure could have used more analysis than drawing a line on a map through priority neighbourhoods, and resources could have expended elsewhere, including places where LRT makes sense without multi-billion dollar tunnels. Why Sheppard and not one continuous line across Finch? Why Morningside and not Wilson? Because politicians chose them. Even if a plan to "give LRT a chance" simply
had to get built, there were easier and more suitable places for LRT lines that would have helped just as many people and done as much for the city. We didn't get this debate then and we're not getting it now. A plan that made sense from the start might not be getting ripped to shreds today by budget fiascos and electoral politics.
There's a difference between throwing out some ideas during an election and having a plan pop up without public input that even surprised some people that work for the city. There's maybe 10 people today who know what Miller said during the election without needing to search google for evidence (and a city-wide scheme that stated what was to be built, and where, and when, and for what reasons was not at stake then), but you'll surely respond with "well, people should have been paying attention to theoretical musings." If he had presented the Transit City plan a year earlier, maybe it would have been an actual election issue.
Even as late as 2007, The Don Mills EA was a study asking questions about what was needed on Don Mills, not a study to formulaically justify a decision already made.