Vote no to waste of YOUR money.....
http://www.notranslinktax.ca/
Just curious.. Do you know who this Jordan Bateman is? Since you're buying his arguments, have you looked into his background, the organisation he works for (Canadian Taxpayers Federation) or any agenda that might influence all of these efforts? You might want to do that. Because even if it doesn't affect your vote in the end, you should still know his deal so you can avoid accepting or repeating his dishonest/misleading 'arguments' - at the very least.
http://thetyee.ca/News/2015/03/09/TransLink-Biggest-Hater/
https://darylvsworld.wordpress.com/2015/02/23/referendum-myths-translink-exec-pay/
https://pricetags.wordpress.com/201...gy-killing-translink-and-the-regional-vision/
http://canspice.org/2015/01/23/thats-pretty-weak/
https://patrickjohnstone.ca/2015/01/fare-evasion-and-jordan-bateman.html
Jordan Bateman is the person who's been the most visible in the media for the No side. Almost everyone who quotes data and most arguments for voting No, come from this guy and his campaign.
The funny thing is that I was going to use the ridiculous 'ethical oil' campaign as a comparison and guess what? I read somewhere that one of those responsible for that campaign is also on the Canadian Taxpayers Federation payroll. Wow. Shocking. (NOT!)
Most if not all of his claims have been debunked yet people have totally latched on to whatever crap he's claimed and completely ignored anything else. Not saying this is all of you but far too many people who should know better have decided to shut off their brain and go with emotions.
The overt No side in the referendum is led by the Canadian Taxpayers Federation (CTF). The CTF does not reveal their funding sources. But given their policies it seems reasonable to assume that, like U.S. anti-transit groups, oil interests pay a significant part of their expenses.
The CTF campaigns actively against climate action. In a 2010 interview with the Halifax Media Coop the CTF's then Federal Director Kevin Gaudet, said "we don't believe there's such thing as man-made climate change."
In B.C. the CTF headed by Jordan Bateman tried to kill B.C.'s carbon tax rather than improving it by using the revenue to fund transit and passenger rail.
Another important player in the CTF's No side campaign is Hamish Marshall, creator of the pro-tar sands EthicalOil.org website.
If the Yes side goes down to defeat in Metro Vancouver, and progressive forces run away with their tails between their legs, imposing designed-to-fail transit referendums could become a favoured tactic of right wing governments across Canada.
On the other hand, if the transit referendum results in an effective movement for better transit right wing governments will see the danger of providing such organizing opportunities. A Yes vote and a strong and ongoing pro-transit movement in Metro Vancouver would probably make this made-to-fail referendum the last of its kind.
Big Oil has a clear vision. It involves more freeways to more automobile dependant suburbs with horrible transit service, forcing even lower income families to own multiple cars and purchase large quantities of gasoline. This model, exported to multiple countries, complements big oil's plans for more and expanded pipelines combined with hugely expanded extraction of tar sands bitumen.
http://rabble.ca/news/2015/03/vancouver-transit-referendum-could-put-plug-pipeline-expansion
258 dollars per year I will pay translink that's one less time I get to visit a k girl and one less time I get to visit aunty cherry. Just ain't no fucking way literally.
It amounts to
$125 per year (much less for lower income households btw) at most for the average household FFS and will result in everyone benefiting enormously.
It's not even about Translink. Anyway, I just don't get the knee jerk reaction and people's eagerness to shoot themselves in the foot, when they will suffer daily for years and years, just because they're angry and so they can feel like they're making a point. And even if you ignore the details of this specific vote, that's really not very rational and it's kind of really stupid IMO.
Anyway, I doubt I'll be in Vancouver long enough to see the results either way but I'll be smh from where ever I am when people are pulling their hair out a decade or two from now, asking wtf were people thinking in refusing to pay that $125 per year to prove a stupid, not even entirely justified point and leaving it to another generation to pay for it in more ways than one - and way more than $125 year. How the hell are people going to justify that (along with the many other problems we will have dumped on them!)?
And if the No wins and it's determined the project must happen regardless, everyone's still going to have to pay for it. Duh. Who else is going to pay for it? Sheesh.
The psychology of ‘no': Vancouver transit vote is case study in why it’s so hard to do what makes us happy
The sad truth is, we can be absolutely awful at making decisions that affect our long-term happiness. Recent work by psychologists has charted a set of predictable cognitive errors that lead us to mistakes like eating too much junk food, or saving too little for retirement. These quirks lead us to make similarly predictable errors when deciding where to live, how to live, how to move, and even how to build our cities.
The Vancouver transit vote is likely to prove psychologists correct again. By most measures, a “No” result in the plebiscite will make the average person poorer, sicker, less free, more frustrated and, yes, less happy in the long run. Yet this is exactly where the polls show the city is headed.
If that’s depressing, at the very least the plebiscite makes for a terrific case study in the psychology of city-building. So let’s drill into it.
What are the actual costs and benefits associated with the mayors’ plan?
The cost: half a percent added to the provincial sales tax. That’s about 3¢ on a beer, or $125/year for the average household.
The benefits?
The plan includes a mind-numbing project list including road improvements, bike lanes, a new bridge over the Fraser River and massive investments in rail and bus transit across the region. However, what really matters to urban happiness is not infrastructure per se, but what’s called the “system effect” on our lives.
System effects are not immediately obvious but they really matter to our health and happiness. For example, studies show a direct correlation between commute times and life satisfaction. System effect: the mayor’s plan will shorten commute times on Vancouver’s most congested roads by 20-30 minutes per day, while transit riders will save up to half an hour. So just about everyone gets more time with family and friends — a key driver of happiness.
A “Yes” vote will make people more free. In many modern suburban neighbourhoods, children and teenagers are totally dependent on their parents to get them to sports, recreation, culture and even friends. This steals their freedom and forces parents into the bondage of endless chauffeuring. (Up to 15% of trips in sprawling American cities are people driving non-drivers around.) More mobility options equals freedom for both drivers and the driven.
A “Yes” vote will also make residents richer because the mayors’ plan will put seven of 10 households within a short walk of a frequent transit line, so many will not need a second car, saving up to $10,000 a year. A report by HDR Consulting found that, even after the sales tax, the average family can expect to save about $360/year.
So the mayors’ plan will make most voters richer, healthier and happier. And on this, a stunning array of long-time adversaries now agree. The tree-huggers and the truck drivers, the students and the suits, the unions and the boards of trade are all on board. Even the premier has returned to the coalition of the willing. Yet a majority of voters plan to vote against their own interests. Why would reasonable people do such a thing? One factor is that our brains lay out all kinds of cognitive traps for us when considering complex decisions.
There is what psychologists call the focus illusion. We put all our attention on one glaring element and ignore details that are harder to grasp or remember. So most people remember the annual tax they’ll have to pay, and place less value on the thousands of moments where their life will become easier.
Most of us have trouble putting fair value on future benefits. If you were stuck in traffic right now and I offered to get you moving for 35¢ (the average daily cost of the new sales tax) you would probably pay up. But the plebiscite choice feels more remote: You are asked to pay a tax now for benefits that will take years to take shape, so those benefits disappear in the haze of distance.
Another error: We assume the future will look a lot like the present. Most residents find it hard to imagine a future with a million extra people living in Metro Vancouver by 2041. But those people are coming, and they will be competing for road space. Picture this: Without a switch to transit, Vancouver would need 26 new freeway lanes just to handle the extra traffic, and an area half the size of Richmond for the extra parking.
Humans have always relied on simplification, metaphor and story to make sense of our world. This was great when we were hunter-gatherers, but has been a disaster in city planning — just ask the residents of such cities as Brasilia, which was planned in the shape of a giant bird. It looks interesting from space but is totally disorienting for people on the ground.
We are more attracted to stories than spreadsheets — the simpler and more mythical, the more compelling. We crave identifiable heroes and villains. The “No” campaign has supplied that story, painting local transit authority executives as a corrupt, wasteful band of thieves.
It doesn’t matter that their assertions are inaccurate. (Translink is arguably one of the most efficient and reliable big-city transit agencies in North America.) It doesn’t matter that the plebiscite is not actually about Translink, or that the results will affect the public much more than Translink leaders. The emotionally charged story feels truer than numbers.
So for many voters, the plebiscite is reduced to an opportunity to express anger about their commute, or engage in a symbolic struggle against a cartoon-like enemy. But this will actually harm voters’ own interests in the long run.
...
http://www.nationalpost.com/m/wp/bl...-a-decision-that-will-corrode-their-happiness
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 ....
So....you're successfully arguing the desperate need for these improvements? Hm. Thanks! LOL
1) FF to 2:11:15 for an anlysis of Trnslinks effectiveness. Pretty much crushes Jordan Batemen's NO side campaign, which can be found here:
http://www.notranslinktax.ca/betterplan. The more I research this issue, the more the NO side sounds like Tea Party crackpots.
http://www.cbc.ca/player/Shows/ID/2659265312/
2) A well written case for Yes
http://foodforthoughtbookclub.com/2015/03/10/vancouvers-rob-ford-moment/
3) If you're bent out of shape about salaries...think again. As for continuing to pay the ex-CEO.... Well, there's a little thing called the Employment Standards Act that says you have to pay out an employee if you terminate him with out notice. This applies to fry cooks as well as CEO's
http://www.vancitybuzz.com/2015/02/no-transit-tax-myths-lies-translink/
Hands down best post. Thanks for the links, although I'm sure not many bothered to read any of it, like they won't bother to read the ones I share.
I have a couple more things to add but will have to do it later...