Road user fees should only be used for road improvements.Road user fees would be another option. Encourage people to shift to public transit and use the revenue gained to improve transit.
Road user fees may make sense for those commuters with options, or live and work within a specific "zone", but for those of us that require a vehicle to earn a living- enough is enough already. We pay enough additional gas tax already. I'm not opposed to bridge tolls to help fund better crossings to reduce congestion, but it ends there. Is there some guarantee that surface LRT or Skytrain service will ever be extended into the valley south of the river? Until then I vote NO on a transit tax add to sales and would encourage a property tax solution to the urban areas- Van, Bby, Rich, NVan, Coq., PoCo, Sry Central etc.- areas that receive more regular and scheduled service already. I'm sure I'm missing some highlights and details here, but in general I'm just frustrated to continually be drilled to pay for services that don't benefit me, and a system that allows- nay, promotes- fare evasion. Gas (and fuel tax), Impark fees, 3-zone fare into the city while you just KNOW that a good percentage of the riders in the train car haven't paid- sign me up to pay more please!Road user fees would be another option. Encourage people to shift to public transit and use the revenue gained to improve transit.
OK, so you did see different places..... but WHY do you compare Vancouver Transit to worse places and not to the best ones.As someone who has notched up somewhere in excess of 700,000 air miles, lived in a number of countries and visited countless more, many on a budget as a student or (as now) underpaid and precariously-employed instructor, I have considerable experience with public transit systems. I agree that there are many systems that are good, but there are also many that aren't, particularly south of the boarder, along with Australia and New Zealand. And in many places, you are paying more than Vancouver for a poorer service.
Hong Kong is cheaper and probably better. And with the years I lived in Hong Kong, along with my travels by public transport around Europe, I still think that Vancouver does pretty well. Is the governance system screwed up. Absolutely. But despite that, Vancouver does pretty well.
Painful .... isn't it..OK, so you did see different places..... but WHY do you compare Vancouver Transit to worse places and not to the best ones.
it is like saying in a review.... ohh, she is good... she is better then some drunk druggie I pick on Hastings.
Lets compare her to the girl that is 10/10/10. Then, lets say... she is as good
As you said, Vancouver does pretty well ...
Here is the example when I really try to be green. ( once )
I had a project in Kits, so I decided to put my car away for a week.
Great, lets do it.... First a bus to go all the way down Lonsdale, then Seabus then Subway then another bus. Total riding time one way .... almost 90 minutes.
Total riding time in my car, 25-30 minutes even in a traffic.
I did it only once ....
That depends Lo-kiPainful .... isn't it..
When ever I go downtown to an event with my friends ..it's way cheaper to drive and park with 4 people.
But how did you get to Edmonds station? Did you take into account the time to commute to the station and find (and pay for) parking; or do you bus to the station? If you live at Canada Way and Edmonds, you'd probably be able to get downtown and park quicker in a car. Coming home would be even quicker because you would not need to wait for a bus to complete your journey.That depends Lo-ki. Whenever I go downtown, it is for many hours. By sky train from Edmund Station to downtown, on average is between $5.50 - $7.00 return. $5.50 return on weekends. From Edmund to downtown estimated travel time....20 minutes. I can be downtown all day and pay no more than $7 max. Again, cheaper on weekends. If you plan on being downtown for hours on end, pay for parking and factor in wear and tear, the cost will surpass the cost of a sky train ticket. Even if you have 4 people in a car. Unless, there cheap places to park that I am unaware of in the downtown core? Of course, my example is being downtown for quite some time.
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Ps....Train tickets are even cheaper if you buy discounted pamphlets. This, of course, is out the window if I was on a date with a lady. Most definitely drive in that case lol![]()
I am glad that it works for you.That depends Lo-ki. Whenever I go downtown, it is for many hours. By sky train from Edmund Station to downtown, on average is between $5.50 - $7.00 return. $5.50 return on weekends. From Edmund to downtown estimated travel time....20 minutes. I can be downtown all day and pay no more than $7 max. Again, cheaper on weekends. If you plan on being downtown for hours on end, pay for parking and factor in wear and tear, the cost will surpass the cost of a sky train ticket. Even if you have 4 people in a car. Unless, there cheap places to park that I am unaware of in the downtown core? Of course, my example is being downtown for quite some time.
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Ps....Train tickets are even cheaper if you buy discounted pamphlets. This, of course, is out the window if I was on a date with a lady. Most definitely drive in that case lol![]()
I am glad that it works for you.That depends Lo-ki. Whenever I go downtown, it is for many hours. By sky train from Edmund Station to downtown, on average is between $5.50 - $7.00 return. $5.50 return on weekends. From Edmund to downtown estimated travel time....20 minutes. I can be downtown all day and pay no more than $7 max. Again, cheaper on weekends. If you plan on being downtown for hours on end, pay for parking and factor in wear and tear, the cost will surpass the cost of a sky train ticket. Even if you have 4 people in a car. Unless, there cheap places to park that I am unaware of in the downtown core? Of course, my example is being downtown for quite some time.
![]()
Ps....Train tickets are even cheaper if you buy discounted pamphlets. This, of course, is out the window if I was on a date with a lady. Most definitely drive in that case lol![]()
And probably a HUGE untold BONUS if the YES side wins.The amounts get thrown around so much they lose meaning and politicians treat our money like it's play money, but municipal governments are currently tossing away, burning, wasting SIX MILLION dollars on advertising trying to sway voters. And it's failing, but they keep pouring it on.
If that doesn't tell you all you need to know about how responsible they'll be with more money I don't know what does.
And remember, all the pushing Hepner and Robertson are doing isn't for free. They're each getting another $50,000 on top of their mayoral salaries for a part time gig with Translink.
Not looking good for the Yessers if my street is any indication.
There are about 30 potential voters in my street including a real cross-section of owners, renters, students, retired people, new arrivals from Alberta and adult children.
Of the 19 I could reach there were - get this - 19 - No to 0 - yes. Holy shit. Some areas will probably vote opposite to this, but I thought we might have at least one person who leaned Yes.
People are just pissed at being treated like ATM's, I think.
+1 on this.The amounts get thrown around so much they lose meaning and politicians treat our money like it's play money, but municipal governments are currently tossing away, burning, wasting SIX MILLION dollars on advertising trying to sway voters. And it's failing, but they keep pouring it on.
If that doesn't tell you all you need to know about how responsible they'll be with more money I don't know what does.
And remember, all the pushing Hepner and Robertson are doing isn't for free. They're each getting another $50,000 on top of their mayoral salaries for a part time gig with Translink.





