Undead
Senior Member
If I remember correctly, we took the TTC (non charter) to the Science Centre and a school bus to the Toyota plant.
What is missing is the 3x as long paragraph saying service reduce on my routes, especially rush hour to ensure riders are more packed together or left on the road waiting for a chance to get on the next bus longer on the following routes: 15 Evans, 17 Birchmount, 29 Dufferin, 929 Dufferin Express, 33 Forest Hill, 34 Eglinton East, 38 Highland Creek, 938 Highland Creak Express, 939 Finch East Express, 42 Cummer, 45 Kipling, 46 Martin Grove, 51 Leslie, 53 Steeles East, 59 Maple Leaf, 68 Warden, 968 Warden Express, 989 Weston Express, 90 Vaughan, 91 Woodbine, 106 Sentinel, 109 Ranee, 110 Islington South, 111 East Mall, 124 Sunnybrook, 126 Christie, 127 Davenport, 130 Middlefield, 132 Milner, 161 Rogers Road and 900 Airport Express.
Some routes appear on both list as there are improvements made in certain times while reductions being made in other times. Clearly someone has realize they don't have money as this list is quite extensive.
The TDSB still uses school buses. Part of the budget comes from the board, additional money can be raised by parent councils. Schools in better off areas are more able to raise money to take more trips via school bus. For high school students, they're mostly used for long distance trips outside Toronto without good public transportation (McMichael Gallery, Mansfield Outdoor Camp, Camp Robinhood, etc).Does anyone here know when the TDSB stopped using school buses for field trips?
The TDSB still uses school buses. Part of the budget comes from the board, additional money can be raised by parent councils. Schools in better off areas are more able to raise money to take more trips via school bus. For high school students, they're mostly used for long distance trips outside Toronto without good public transportation (McMichael Gallery, Mansfield Outdoor Camp, Camp Robinhood, etc).
I don't know how this wasn't brought up, but the TDSB already provides student TTC tickets for students who ask for them. The report says that school boards purchased 1.7 million student tickets. They're supposed to be prioritized for students who live far away or were in financial need. My school had a lot of extra tickets, so the guidance department would hand them out quite freely. I got a bunch of free tickets for field trips and sports.
Some students would trade their tickets for food, cash, etc at the convenience store across the street...
Nonetheless, I don't see what's wrong with the current system where school boards are in charge of purchasing and distributing TTC tickets for student transportation. The only thing this does is shift some of the costs of student transportation away from the school boards and onto the TTC. Students on field trips crowding vehicles already happens (kids 12 and under already ride for free).
This is from the report:Can you still obtain student tickets? I know Presto has a system for dispensing these at their machines; but I had been under the impression that old-school tickets from the TTC were a thing of the past.
This is from the report:
"To establish a baseline of existing rides, staff have used annual PRESTO bulk sales of youth PRESTO tickets to Toronto school boards as an approximation. There are 1.7 million youth PRESTO tickets sold per annum. Of this, approximately 1.5 million youth PRESTO tickets are given to students for home-to-school travel. It is assumed that the remaining 0.2 million youth PRESTO tickets are used for field trips."
I wonder if part of the low numbers has to do with COVID and students not knowing they can ask for tickets. If students don't ask for them, then the school boards aren't going to go out and buy them.That's interesting...........
But ya know, that doesn't cover very many kids; by my math, 1,500,000 fares, divided by 195 school days, divided by 2 trips per school day, works out to fewer than 3,900 students in the entire city.
200,000 for field trips, would be 100,000 person events (round trip equals 2 fares); if the class size is 30 that's 3,333 field trips. There are something like 110 TDSB High Schools, plus you have to add middle schools in, in some measure (I'm guessing at 40, as I can't find the stat.)......that's 22 class field trips per school. Almost certainly less than 1 per class per year.
Perhaps things have changed by now, but when I was in high school I went to an out-of-zone school in a particular program which was the only one in the area that offered that program. So long as we were enrolled in the program, we were given tickets - we didn't have to ask for them.I wonder if part of the low numbers has to do with COVID and students not knowing they can ask for tickets. If students don't ask for them, then the school boards aren't going to go out and buy them.
Walker has been working on some projects in Ireland like Dublin and Cork Busconnects, which got quite strong pushback but that’s because the historical fare structures and service reliability in Ireland largely discouraged route/mode transfers so people instinctively distrust the idea, whereas transfers are understood and expected (if not exactly welcomed) here. It also seems common that when these plans get rolled out, the local governments throw in changes to road networks or bus franchising (Wellington NZ in the latter case) which makes it difficult to parse out anger about the network change with anger about the other stuff.Not sure where I should place it and maybe interesting for some to see it. It is free or you can pay some money for it
He has worked for several systems in the GTA along with workshops. I have been to a few of them and have read his site from time to time with mixed reviews.
Event RSVP
Jarrett Walker on “Human Transit”
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 2024
12:00PM EASTERN




