And I'm sure it will take a 5 year feasibility study along with a "pilot" of the new crossings prior to just doing the obvious.
I'm curious to see what the LRT looks like when it's all finished. Will it continue to be a dystopian hell hole like it is now that I wouldn't allow any family or friends to ride in good conscience, or will it actually be cleaned up and become a convenient, safe means of transportation?
Who am I kidding, we all know it's going to end up being the former, not the latter. I know a few people that live close to new stations and I know a few people that have businesses close to the new stations, all of them are dreading when it's operational. Only in this City could you take something that would conceivably be very lucrative/convenient for these people and turn it into something they don't want for no reason other than they have seemingly zero interest in improving safety on the LRT.
Two things I was told many years ago.
Don't live close to the LRT/Bus stations and move out when a bottle depot opens up near you.
The bus/lrt situation could be safe, but there is no money for it.
The City is finally starting to realize(talk about) being as spread out as we are isn't feasible. Like shocking. We couldn't keep up with services for years, but we think continuing to build on the outskirts and pushing the limits is going to make things better?
There were complaints 2-3 years ago how the city has issues removing snow in cul de sacs, but they continue to allow developers to build new communities with these restrictions.
City maintenance is complaining to the neighbourhood renewal division that they have to double their staff because of how they changed these remove and replace roads/sidewalks programs into beautification programs.
Seems like at least these morons can identify problems, but they don't do anything to fix them and continue to allow the stupidity. Although I did hear the Neighbourhood renewal program is going to be a lot less next year as they sit down and figure out how to make things more feasible. I mean simple solution is remove the roads, sidewalks and underground and replace it with similar specs. Not remove and replace it with total new designs that make an area look nicer, but costs homeowners and taxpayers money and headaches.
Edit: On a side note if you are looking to buy a house in a neighbourhood that has recently or is currently under renovation please check into what the previous owner did with regards to payment. If it's been deferred onto the taxes you should lowball the homeowner so you don't get stuck paying higher taxes.