CBBarnett
Senior Member
I mean, we can go back even further too. If the Province had built the South Hospital along the Red Line in Midnapore as originally proposed in the 1990s the Green Line business case would have been forever weakened and likely never emerged as a priority. Plus we'd all have rapid transit directly to a major hospital for the past 15 years. Can always rely on politically connected land owners to successfully lobby in this province.Are you sure about these ones? What makes you say the plan we have now is the best long term plan? Or, is it the plan we have now due to path dependency and inertia from a whole bunch of poor decisions made 8-10 years ago?
Going back a step further, the general highway-fueled sprawl of the deep south that makes the Inglewood to Mackenzie Towne stretch of the Greenline mostly just cost and distance with little actual benefit doesn't help either. It's not the major cost driver, but made the BRT option weak and less beneficial - too far, too slow, too few riders generated in the middle stretch of the route.
Not saying these are fair things to line up for or against the project, just the project's business case has always been saddled by structural problems created due to poor planning for the past 50 years, with plenty of blame to go around.
Perhaps transit projects should try to take a page out of arterial and highway projects - always be phased and incremental and make the project a pre-requisite for growth. Incremental and phased approach hides the total cost, pre-requisite to growth aligns the land owners to lobby for funding. The Greenline catchment area has seen $5 - 10B in road and highway infrastructure built in the time someone first drew that SE BRT dotted line on the map. All of that was spent with no concerns raised about the cost, value or impact.
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