Olivia Chow wants to boost TTC bus service by 10% - Action News
Home WebMail Sunday, November 24, 2024, 03:52 AM | Calgary | -12.2°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Toronto

Olivia Chow wants to boost TTC bus service by 10%

Toronto mayoral candidate Olivia Chow wants to boost bus service in Toronto by 10 per cent.
Chow used a bus stop at Jane and Wilson to announce a part of her transit plan. (Amanda Margison/CBC)

Toronto mayoral candidate Olivia Chow wants to boost bus service in Toronto by 10 per cent and inject $15 million into the beleagueredtransit system.

Chow made the announcement Thursday morning at a bus stop at the corner of Jane Street and Wilson Avenue.

She wants theTTCtoincrease rush hour capacity by 10 per cent on itsbusiest routes using buses.

Rob Ford says he stands up for the little guy, said Chow. Thats news to people on the bus."

She stressed buses to take the crowding out of the existing routes, so riders aren't "packed like sardines" and there is "more comfortable, more frequent service.

Chow said the emphasis on the bus routes was because 60 per cent of riders use a bus at some point in their trip.

She promised toinvest $15 million a year to improve bus service on high-traffic routes.

She said this focus on transit differentiates her from her competition in the mayoral race.

Ford and Tory have no plan to improve TTC service today. No specifics about how theyll pay for their faraway ideas. And no specifics about the true cost of underground rail to Scarborough, she said.

Chow says the $15 million which would go toward busmaintenance, operating costs and hiring new drivers would comefrom the existing budget as well as property tax increases based oninflation rates.

The Toronto Transit Commission plans on retiring old buses whennew ones are delivered, but Chow says keeping the old ones on theroad would mean quicker service.

Chow would not commit to a downtown relief subway line right nowbecause she says there is no clear, realistic proposal of how itwill be funded.

With files from Canadian Press