Gil Meslin Profile picture
Mar 6, 2018 46 tweets 5 min read Twitter logo Read on Twitter
1. Our debates about how we share the public right-of-way focus a lot on travel time.

I’d like to talk about comfort, risk and trade-offs.
2. Let me preface this by saying that I’ve taken transit to work for about 10 years. I biked for 5 (and will again!). At the moment I drive.
3. So yes, while I believe in and advocate for cycling infrastructure and safe streets, I also own and drive a car.
4. Any discussion about reallocating road space seems to inevitably pivot on one metric: change in travel time for drivers.
5. Any attempt to update 1960s road design to reflect contemporary policy objectives brings out the familiar tropes…
6. ‘Making congestion worse’. ‘War on the car’. All ways of saying that cars move too slowly, and driving commutes take too long…
7. …implying that drivers are disproportionately aggrieved and discomfited, compared to those using other modes to travel around the city.
8. They’re not.
We ALL wish our commutes were shorter. Commuting is not what we want to do, it is what takes us to the things we want to do.
9. But here’s the thing: at least in a car, your commute is COMFORTABLE.
10. When you drive, you are travelling in your own personal climate-controlled space, dry, warm in the winter, cool in the summer…
11. When you drive, you always have a seat, you have a place to put down your heavy bags, your car does all the work...
12. When you drive, you can play your music out loud, as loud as you want, and sing along, and the batteries never run out…
13. Having walked, biked, and travelled to work by bus/streetcar/subway – let’s be frank, a car is a moving comfort box.
14. Compare driving to the experience of TTC riders crammed on a bus, jostling on a platform, or watching streetcars pass by…
15. Compare driving to the experience of a pedestrian in winter, waiting on a corner for a signal to change after pressing a beg button…
16. Compare driving to getting caught in the rain – whether on bike, on foot, or waiting on the street for a bus or streetcar…
17. Yet somehow, despite relative comfort, we seem to elevate the time of drivers above those of travelers using other modes.
18. And let me add to the notion of comfort, that of safety and risk.

When I drive, I never feel remotely at risk. At city speeds, I’m not.
19. Compare that to a cyclist, on a painted sharrow, looking at the rear wheels of the passing truck, and imagining the worst…
20. Compare that to a pedestrian, with the right of way, unsure if the driver of the right-signalling car with tinted windows has seen them…
21. …or the one who uses a crosswalk every day, but never really feels secure that somebody isn’t going to blow through it…
22. And yet we have #REimagineYonge, where some Councillors would diminish improvements to the comfort and safety of pedestrians/cyclists…
23. …so that drivers in 2031 might save a half-minute – 30 seconds – based on modelling of Transform Yonge vs. the 6-lane alternative.
24. This is perverse – it implies a system of thinking that prioritizes the time of drivers, however small, above all else.
25. Look at #GardinerEast – the Boulevard was preferable in almost every respect, but it cost a small number of drivers a few minutes. DOA.
26. If we are to be honest, there is probably no intervention that improves all metrics for all users. We are dealing in trade-offs.
27. An opinion: a minute longer in a car isn’t a big deal, and is a fair trade-off to meaningfully improve the safety and comfort of others.
28. But making fair decisions in a context demanding trade-offs requires the application of transparent weighting & prioritization.
29. Instead, we have Councillors who wield driver time like a trump card that tops any other consideration – safety, environment, cost…
30. Rather than evidence-based decision-making, evidence is collected and then arbitrarily discarded. It is effectively study-washing.
31. the sad irony is that protecting every minute of driver time today will ultimately cost drivers dearly down the road.
32. If you really want to help drivers in the long-run, you need more people to choose to travel by other modes.
33. For that to happen, we need to make those modes safe, comfortable and reliable. That requires short-term trade-offs for long-term gain.
34. But that requires a decision-making horizon that extends far beyond the next election cycle, considering present and future users.
35. Regrettably, when making infrastructure decisions that will impact the city for decades or more, that’s the perspective we’re missing.
36. Final thoughts: perhaps the ire of drivers is as much rooted in a mismatch between expectations and reality as day-to-day experience…
37 …and perhaps it would help if we stopped lying to drivers that a city such as Toronto can ever roll back congestion…
38 …a city whose arterial roads were built out when it and the surrounding region had millions fewer people...
39 …a city that is growing by 25,000 people a year, in a region that is growing by 70,000 people a year…
40 …a city with a thriving downtown employment centre that is adding jobs, and that attracts people from across that large, growing region…
41 ...a city that sprawls, 40km x 20km, and that is largely comprised of low density neighbourhoods…
42 …a city that has under-invested in transit, and that seems determined to get the least value for dollars spent on new infrastructure…
43 …if we stop telling drivers they are at war, maybe we will see less aggression on our roads and in our discourse…
44 …and if we can begin to talk honestly about the degree to which congestion will be a fact of life in this city going forward…
45 ...then maybe we could also start talking honestly about long-term solutions to efficiently and equitably moving people.
- End -

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More from @g_meslin

Sep 16, 2018
1. In a few hours @fordnation will convene Legislature at 12:01 AM.

To rush a bill using the notwithstanding clause.

In the dead of night…
@fordnation @RodPhillips01 @MichaelParsa @Andrea_Khanjin @douglasdowney @ToddSmithPC @PrabSarkaria @sandhuamarjot1 @billwalkermpp @janemckennapc @KarahaliosPC 2. He claims this as an important policy matter.

It was not campaigned on.
It narrowly effects Toronto.
It has no real case for support.
Read 40 tweets
Sep 11, 2018
1. Can we talk a bit about the referendum that @JohnTory keeps circling back to? #TOpoli #Bill5
@JohnTory 2. In Tory's letter to Ford: "I urge you to consider putting the process on hold to allow for a referendum so we can let the people speak.”
@JohnTory 3. Let the people speak...

Conveniently walking past the consultation that has taken place, devaluing the input of those who participated.
Read 22 tweets
Jul 27, 2018
1. The 25 ward option was examined as part of the City's Ward Boundary Review process (drawthelines.ca).
2. After the original recommendations (47 wards), Exec Ctee asked the consultants to provide additional info, leading to this final report.
3. 'additional info' included "whether and how Toronto's ward boundaries could be consistent with the 25 federal and provincial ridings".
Read 19 tweets
Jul 5, 2018
1. Apparently it's never too soon to scapegoat.
@Fordnation attributes our housing crisis to asylum seekers.
Let's thread on actual causes.
@fordnation 2. Decades of disinvestment in building & maintaining social housing have contributed to our housing crisis. Not asylum seekers.
@fordnation 3. Political ideologies valuing a dollar less in taxes over the benefits of social programs & public goods contribute. Not asylum seekers.
Read 20 tweets
Mar 27, 2018
1) A mapping thread to provide some context and perspective for #TransformYonge.

This is Toronto’s street network.
2) Excluding laneways, Toronto has 5,289 centreline km of expressways, arterials, collectors, and local roads.
3) If we drop local roads, which don’t handle through traffic, we have 2,105 centreline km of expressways, arterials, and collectors.
Read 50 tweets
Mar 21, 2018
1. A few thoughts about the tragic incident in Arizona, where a woman was killed by an #Uber self-driving car…
2. Much of what I read in the first day after the incident clearly tried to shift blame to the victim, and to devalue that individual…
3. She was crossing outside a marked crosswalk…

She came out of the shadows…

She may have been homeless…

She had a criminal record…
Read 48 tweets

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