Whoa .. Tyranny-onto it is. Brilliant and original. Name calling apart, you have to realize that all the three sprawling suburbs i mentioned do not have as as many offices and corporate power houses of downtown Toronto. Its just block after block of jumbo sized houses. So where do all those folks go to work ?
Gardiner is usually jammed coming into the city, not as bad westbound and out of the city on most days. Reverse is true in the afternoons.
This phenomenon is actually the bane of almost all big metropolises I have lived in. The suburbs sprout for cheap housing and the new homeowners have no incentive to find work closer to home and they settle for long commutes as long as there is a highway connecting them.
The businesses are hesitant to move out of the city core, or the village/town/city planning in the sub-urbs do not cleverly plan office spaces in proportion to the amount of residential density. Nor do they offer incentives to attract enough businesses. So, it will only be counter productive to move businesses out of the financial core.
I agree that not everyone who uses the Gardiner is from the suburbs, but what I had in mind is similar to the tolls used for cars entering the city core in London ( UK of course ). I think its common knowledge that most traffic snarl-ups happen due to the high volume of traffic flowing into the city and out of it to you know where.
[PS. nice ride Myztyk ]