reaperexpress
Senior Member
Queue jump lanes are the single most effective way of improving bus service in the suburbs. Most of the delays occur at the intersection between two arterial roads (e.g. Bathurst & Finch, Keele & Finch, etc) where intersections are limited by capacity. No amount of signal priority or operational changes will get buses through those intersections quickly. The only solution is a reserved or prioritied space where buses can bypass the traffic queues approaching those intersections. Existing Queue Jump Lane examples include westbound on Finch at Finch Station, and eastbound on Finch at Markham, and eastbound on Steeles at Don Mills.The consultation here has been bloated to say the least.
That said, part of the problem is too many suspect solutions (queue jump lanes);
Bus & Right Turn lane on Steeles eastbound approaching Don Mills.
Between those intersections the minor signals may be congested, but that congestion is merely spilling back from major intersections. The intersections themselves actually have capacity to spare, so the delays there can fairly effectively be managed using signal priority.
Toronto has had transit signal priority (TSP) since the 1990's. Most streetcar corridors have TSP and some major bus corridors (Dufferin, Keele) do as well. I have already explained numerous times why the system does't work effectively so I won't repeat myself.Hopefully it won't take 2-3 years to give priority signals to transit. Such a study to change the road configuration seems a bit more reasonable.
(Edit to remove doubled word)
These are up to TTC Bus Operations, and often face conflict from ATU 113 (e.g. managing service and disciplining the tiny minority of operators who single-handedly cause the vast majority of avoidable service delays). They are not comfortable following up with the particular operators who operate incredibly slowly (drive very slow, stop at green lights, don't close the doors promptly) because they fear that encouraging anyone to do anything faster constitutes a safety risk.instead of focusing on basics such as managing service, better bus design, all-door loading, no cash fares on buses, fare validation in bus interiors, so people don't block doors fumbling for cards,
TTC Service Planning is constantly fighting TTC Bus Operations for shorter times to reduce congestion at terminals and shorten passenger journeys, Bus operations wants as much time as possible to maximize operator breaks and reduce the amount of active managemment required.tighter route times,
TTC loading standards are already precise, as defined per vehicle type. The level of crowding permitted by the standards is regularly revised by the TTC Board based on available budget. More budget = fewer passengers per vehicle in the standard.less crowded vehicles by employing better and more precise loading standards, (number of seats expected to be occupied expressed as a percentage of capacity),
TTC Operations Planning has been fighting for both of these items for years, and has managed to remove dozens of superfluous stops over the past decade. However, that would have been hundreds if not for the removals commonly being vetoed by the local City Councillor. Same with traffic signals. TTC Operations and City Transportation Services both object to the installation of unnecessary and/or counterproductive traffic signals, but Council typically overrules them and installs them to placate one or more vocal citizens who (incorrectly) believe that the signals will solve the road network's fundamental safety flaws.along with fewer stops, and fewer traffic lights.
Additionally when streetcar tracks get reconstructed, TTC and the City should jointly determine if they want them in the same location or if they should be spread out in key locations to provide a left turn lane (e.g. southbound Bathurst at Adelaide). But the TTC just goes around doing like-for-like replacement, and just copies the same track layout and equipment that they've been using for the past hundred years.That, and obstructing left turns that are at uncontrolled intersections (no lights etc.) so that buses/streetcars don't generally get caught behind a left-turning vehicle, particularly on high volume routes and/or at locations that become a frequent issue.
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