>>I wonder how much of that has to do with our country being much larger and spread out. Not just between cities, but the cities themselves as well? Probably harder to establish efficient mass transit.
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>I think it has more to do with money. We have the same situation (if not even greater) in Canada. We used to have a pretty good passenger rail system, but the railways realised that there is not enough money in passenger rail. The bigger bucks are in freight, so passenger rail has taken a real beating. In the cities (Toronto being the best example), there are not enough dollars being put into the system to grow it properly, so what happens is that the system has to settle for cramming more people into the same space. To the point where I simply refuse to ride on a Toronto Transit bus or subway unless I've reached a point of desperation rarely seen in civilised society. We do have a fairly decent commuter system called GO Transit, for people travelling into or out of Toronto from not too far away places. But within the city, the Toronto system is untenable as far as I'm concerned, and it all has to do with cash.
I love the double-decker Go trains. We couldn't have them in the UK cos our rail infrastructure was laid down long-long ago, by itinerant dinosaurs, and there are so many wee tunnels that the trains need to go through.
- Whoever said that women are the weaker sex never tried to wrest the bedclothes off one in the middle of the night
- Worry is the interest you pay, in advance, for a loan that you may never need to take out.