After years of delay, the Finch West LRT line finally opened in Toronto ... and the initial reception has been really, really bad.

So bad that the mayor felt the need to post to reddit:

https://www.reddit.com/r/toronto/comments/1pii3ay/comment/nt6qle8/

I'm going to be in Toronto soon. Should I make a video about the Finch West LRT, or would that be beating a dead horse at this point? 🤔

@notjustbikes I watched some news clips (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bKtUccVySEc and https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OsCFS-Mxzyo)

What strikes me:
– The Mayor/councillors/TTC Board *can* order signal priority.
– The vox pops show that there *are* orgs and individuals who (a) clearly understand that concept, plus frequency, reliability, etc. and (b) specifically demand those things.

IMO valuable would be your take on: what is missing, process-wise, such that these ingredients don't lead to the right outcome on opening day?

Residents react to Toronto's Finch West LRT opening

YouTube

@notjustbikes

For instance, perhaps in AMS/elsewhere, the agency builds/opens lines itself and has a refined process for that, including pre-adjusting signals.

For Finch W, it's a one-off P3 consortium, who seem to have spent $ on lawyers (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ii3cW6KVS5Q) instead of on executing a smooth hand-off to the City et al.

Or: perhaps in T.O. agencies & contractors are not obliged to respond to transit advocates' concerns during the build.

That kind of comparison would be valuable.

Consortium building Finch West LRT suing Ontario government, Metrolinx

YouTube

@paulnatsuo I talked about this in my Toronto streetcars video. The TTC is an extremely (small-c) conservative organisation.

If they've always been doing something a certain way, they'll keep doing it forever, and they are never willing to look outside of North America.

Even reading the minutes from the meeting about signal priority they kept talking about how it would be revolutionary in North America to let the trams go before left-turning cars. 🙄

@notjustbikes What I took from the coverage is that there are people trying to effect change, and they're savvy enough to pick up specific points about operations (e.g. signal priority) and hammer the TTC &al. Your videos often encourage such people.

I imagine they'd just as eagerly press points about governance, if given some.

But if there aren't any, and the conclusion is simply “there will only ever be dead horses, nothing else is possible,” then indeed probably no need for an extra video.

@notjustbikes @paulnatsuo Edmonton transit is apparently a much more progressive organization, as Edmonton's LRT (both the heavy rail style that dates to the 80s, and the new tram style that opened just a year or two ago) have always had signal priority.