kEiThZ
Superstar
For Ottawa I was specifically thinking of Carleton Place.
Personally never known anybody in Carleton Place or a town like that that was really interested in bus commutes. Not in the least, because they tended to have a wide distribution of final destinations (not all going downtown) which made any bus commute quite difficult. Any subsidized bus service would end up about as successful as GO's 4 hr train from London to Toronto.
Simply being near a city doesn't make them "commuter towns" for that city. For example, why would you assume that somebody in Stratford is more interested in commuting to London than KWC? And go ahead and show us how commuter interest in Woodstock compares between London, KWC, Hamilton and even the GTA.For London, it is right smack dab in the middle of a number of commuter towns. St.Thomas 47,000, Ingersol 14,000, Woodstock 50,000, Aylmer 8500, Tillsonburg 19,000, Strathroy 18,000, Middlesex Centre 23,000, Thames Centre 14,0000, as well as St.Mary's 7,000 and Stratford 32,000 in Perth counties.
The discussion here gets ridiculous when it's all based on emotional nonsense and appeals to fairness that never consider actual need. You don't care about ridership. You want buses (even if they are empty) running to these places just to say they have regional service. The very fact that these cities aren't themselves clamouring for regional transport (especially to London) over all the other priorities they have should tell you that they don't consider it substantially important. Put it this way, how many of them have subsidized their own transit services to London or have high shuttle demand to London? I would bet Pearson Airport shuttles from London have higher demand than commuters from every town you listed.
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