I might have done that pass as the bike too. That front rider was all over the place and parking it in the corners. I would have put the hammer done to open up some more space though.THis thread reminds me of this video
I might have done that pass as the bike too. That front rider was all over the place and parking it in the corners. I would have put the hammer done to open up some more space though.THis thread reminds me of this video
PM Trials. He'll show you how to ride properly.
At a rally in Arkansas a guy was bragging about doing the same but he used his gun to ensure compliance by the cross traffic.I've been on a few of group rides with TTSR & Let's Just Ride where the ride captains blocked intersections like a police bike marshalling a funeral. That behavior makes me cut out and go solo.
THis thread reminds me of this video
In other news I note we now have bike lanes on danforth. Oy vey.
2) Where bicycle lanes have been afforded, cyclists should be limited to those lanes and prohibited from using the auto lanes for anything but turning or avoiding obstacles in bike lanes.
I don’t think motorists feel entitled in the same way cyclists feel entitled. Motorists pay taxes to support building and maintaining roads, cyclists do not.
Tradespeople don't have the option of taking the TTC or GO trains. Expect to pay more for service calls unless everyone else leaves their cars at home.I drive on Danforth all the time, I like the one way each direction traffic. Less morons trying to jump into the right lane and cut you off during the intersection before they hit the parked cars in front of them.
Yah until every other block with Uber Drivers and Taxis using it as a parking lane. Even on Sherborne with it being raised wasn't enough, which is why all the new lanes come with concrete dividers.
Property taxes pay for roads, gas taxes pay for the Ontario highways. With the City allowing developers to cut back on parking spots in condo buildings. Eventually we will become a city of cyclists whether anyone likes it or not. And their property taxes are paying for the roads just as much as yours.
I’m not downtown enough to comment on Uber andTaxi drivers. Out here in the suburbs most cyclists stick to the cycling lanes. I do have complaints - cyclists don’t always see stop signs or traffic signals, some use sidewalks, many are inconsiderate on the multiuse pathways around here.…Property taxes pay for roads, gas taxes pay for the Ontario highways. With the City allowing developers to cut back on parking spots in condo buildings. Eventually we will become a city of cyclists whether anyone likes it or not. And their property taxes are paying for the roads just as much as yours.
Tradespeople don't have the option of taking the TTC or GO trains. Expect to pay more for service calls unless everyone else leaves their cars at home.
I’ll leave it at this: user fees and gas taxes collected by Ontario equal 100% of public spending on road building, maintenance and policing including road and roadside bike lanes.
Danforth was two full lanes with the parked cars. Either the city screwed it up, or people disregarded the signs and the city did nothing.I drive on Danforth all the time, I like the one way each direction traffic. Less morons trying to jump into the right lane and cut you off during the intersection before they hit the parked cars in front of them.
Yah until every other block with Uber Drivers and Taxis using it as a parking lane. Even on Sherborne with it being raised wasn't enough, which is why all the new lanes come with concrete dividers.
Property taxes pay for roads, gas taxes pay for the Ontario highways. With the City allowing developers to cut back on parking spots in condo buildings. Eventually we will become a city of cyclists whether anyone likes it or not. And their property taxes are paying for the roads just as much as yours.
Danforth was two full lanes with the parked cars.
LOL.Oh trust me I know. I drive a service van every day.
You can leave it at whatever you want it to be, but you are wrong.
Government Spending on Transportation - Tables 1-6
tc.canada.ca
Local Municipalities are paying $13.148 billion for municipal roads. Federal and Provincial transfers amounted to $1.4 billion. A mere 9.6% of local roads were funded through gas taxes and provincial/federal fees. AND that also is lumped together with the provincial and federal transit subsidies. So no, municipal roads are still being paid for primarily by property taxes.
The Ontario provincial government spent $7.964 billion on roads, but user fees and provincial gas tax revenues accounted for $3.279 billion. Which means that short fall of $4.7 billion was income taxes that paid for it. So even the provincial highway system is dependant on taxation of all Ontarians not just "drivers".
By the way, Ontario taxpayers pay about $2 billion in driver/motor vehicle licensing and vehicle registration fees, $7 billion in fuel taxes ( your numbers were a decade old)
You forgot a the federal taxes paid by road users. Also remember HST is collected on rose taxes.Numbers are a decade old but at least they are verifiable.
Right from the Ontario budget Fuel Taxes collected ...
2018-2019 $774 million
2019-2020 $807 million
2021 Ontario Budget | Chapter 3
2021 Ontario Budget — Ontario's Action Plan: Protecting People's Health and Our Economybudget.ontario.ca
So even if I take your $2 billion in licensing at face value, you are still about $5 billion dollars short in covering provincial road costs.
Do the same for cyclists and you lose exactly $0.
Empty argument. There would only be dirt paths.Straw-man argument. If it was only bicycles on the roads what would the road repair budget look like?
mid you really want to simplify things, cut off all road use taxes and fees paid by drivers to operate vehicles and you lose $12.2b revenues. Do the same for cyclists and you lose exactly $0.
Straw-man argument. If it was only bicycles on the roads what would the road repair budget look like?