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LETTER: Twinning of GO line fraught with unresolved issues

'Why not encourage businesses to locate in the 905 areas instead of encouraging tens of thousands of workers to travel from the 905 areas to Toronto?' questions letter writer
20210319 GO Train in Guelph 3
File photo

Newmarket Today welcomes letters to the editor at [email protected]. Please include your daytime phone number and address (for verification of authorship, not publication). 

Re: Metrolinx crews 'mobilizing' to double GO tracks at Aurora station, April 14, 2023.

Unless there has been some serious rewriting of the GO expansion plans/deliverables in recent years, the twinning of the line to Barrie is fraught with unresolved issues. One of the biggest is parking availability.

Prior to the announced expansion 65+ per cent of GO users parked at the GO parking lots. Along with the ridership expansion plans, the parking spaces were to be increased 10 per cent.

Roughly speaking, the GO expansion plan calls for doubling the number of commuters with a reduction in the percentage of commuters who park at the GO stations going from 65+ per cent to under 40 per cent.

The hope was / is that local public transit would bring all of the remaining new riders to the GO station. What could possibly go wrong?

This looks a lot like the UP Express plans that called for an operational break-even with ridership at 75 per cent of capacity and a $20 fare; $1 billion later, ridership was not remotely close to 75 per cent of capacity and the fare was dropped to $12 to get the ridership up.

Now there's no chance of ever breaking even. We've just created another subsidized transit system that was sold on being self-sustaining. Isn't it amazing what one can do with numbers when there is a predetermined conclusion?

Does this all not sound a little tone deaf to the global warming challenge all of humanity is facing?

Why not encourage businesses to locate in the 905 areas instead of encouraging tens of thousands of workers to travel from the 905 areas to Toronto? Commute times could easily be halved.

This would reduce the amount of subsidized transit required while improving workers' quality of life with shorter commutes all the while reducing carbon emissions.

That's a win-win-win, the way I see it.

Jack Taylor
Bradford