trtcttc
Senior Member
This isn't unique to Calgary, and I don't think this will change unless we meaningfully reduce our road network. In Toronto, every person can tell you a story of a problem with the TTC, from delays, replacement busses, crazy people, fights, etc. When I lived downtown Toronto, in a span of 4 years had 2 separate incidents where police with actual rifles boarded the train looking for something/someone, countless encounters with people screaming or removing their clothing on the train, one time the streetcar was filled with flying cotton because a homeless man was ripping the filling out of a bunch of pillow, it looked like it was snowing in the train. But when that happened, most people stayed in the train, because the next train could be 20 mins away (the headway on TO streetcars and extremely inconsistent), and most people either didn't own cars or driving downtown is a nightmare.It's unfortunate. I always think of the old expression 'perception is reality' My perception of the train has been fine, but I'm done with trying to convince people it's fine when they have a different perception. All it takes is a bad experience or a story of a bad experience and the damage is done.
My son and I have taken lots of trips on the train over recent years, and this summer he wanted to do a big boy trip with his friends. They decided to take the train from Brentwood to Sunnyside, and then were going to take the bus home from there. As luck would have it there was a physical altercation on the train, and one of the guys in the altercation ended up urinating in the train car. Long story short he's not interested in taking the train again.
In Calgary, transit is almost always slower than driving, outside of maybe the few hours of rush-hour on very specific routes. So when someone has a bad experience, they can just swear off transit and be done with it. Whereas in Toronto, New York, etc. you just have to tough it out because the alternative is slower and more expensive. Some on this forum would argue we should be all transit and stop building so many roads, but I think that is the trade off with the size of city we are. If we are a 8 million city like the GTA then part of that is the need for transit, but you get a more vibrant downtown, bigger concerts, etc.. We're a smaller city and part of that is traffic isn't a nightmare and if you need to drive, you don't have to waste hours in traffic.