300 million for Rapid Transit!
The province has given 300 million for rapid transit.
Three things to remember as the Record notes the possible shortfall from the province.
1. I am sure staff is busy looking at plans and alternatives for council.
2. The feds have to put their amount in.
3. Regional councillors are not going to look kindly on any funny kind of money agreement like the RIM park financing. The accountants on staff (not to mention the accountants like Mayor Carl Zehr) are thankfully extremely prudent and conservative (small c)
Further thoughts on LRT
Electric trains will be a lot quieter along King St. And people forget that roads and increasing lanes not only cut up a city but also increase noise and gridlock. Onlyhaving more roads would cost the same and the dedicated bus 555 million. But most importantly in these times, this line will create approxitmately 35,000 permanent jobs around the stations.
Two statements that keep coming up.
The trains are going from mall to mall. First, there is a certain amount of snobbery in people who use the word “mall” as if it was a bad thing. Secondly, the LRT stops at the universities, both downtowns, the RT park, hospital and King/Ottawa. Eventually it will go to Cambridge where, horrors, it may stop at a mall then onto historic Ainslie St.
The trains aren’t flexible like buses, the route can’t be changed. There will always be transit in the central corridor. There is now with the number 7 buses and Ixpress and there was in the deep past when I was a girl and took the bus and trolleys ran between Forwells and Rockway Center. No need for flexibility when the main route will always exist and always be busy. Yup, Ixpress was busy on Monday morning even with the students gone for the summer.
Here is a comment from my cousin John in England about the LRT.

The RIM Park fiasco was a fiasco not because the city went into debt, but because it got scammed and should have known better.
Yeah, you need to be careful with debt, but if it makes you money in the long run (with an expanded tax base and increased development) then it can be a worthwhile investment. Likewise if it saves money by deferring expensive road upgrades.
I’d rather see a shortened route than a switch to buses, although that might be more politically tenable vis a vis Cambridge.
But, of course, I’d really like to see the system go ahead as planned.