this post was submitted on 28 Jan 2025
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[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 month ago (3 children)

I'm also against tax dollars spent to build toll rolls, especially if they are handed over to private entities. I'm not familiar with your postal system, but it would be odd if it requires a significant amount of public funds to operate.

Yes, the lowest income may not be able to afford cars, but that ignores the large swaths of barely surviving folks that can and do operate vehicles out of necessity. For instance, many in the service industry or "unskilled labor" likely have to commute in to work in these places they can't afford to live. Depending on their location, there may not be public transportation in the meaningful sense to get them to work. There should be provisions to address this, but there often isn't.

[–] doylio 3 points 1 month ago (2 children)

The way that London has done a congestion tax, by law, all the funds raised from it go towards improving public transit. It has been an enormous success there! The transit is much better, the city is less polluted, and if you do choose to drive in the city, you have less traffic to deal with.

I'm sure you can find a niche of people who are worse off in this situation, but Londoners overall are very supportive of it given the fact it has been in place for 22 years now without a gov't repealing it.

[–] Ahrotahntee 1 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Londoners overall are very supportive of it given the fact it has been in place for 22 years now without a gov’t repealing it

In Canada it's a politically successful strategy to agitate the suburbs. Even if implemented at the start of a liberal government, conservatives would be able to get rid of congestion fees in as little as 4 years.

Look at what Ontario is doing to the bike lanes in Toronto. It has been a struggle to get the bare minimum of biking infrastructure put in over the last 3 mayors of Toronto and the Provincial Conservatives have successfully campaigned suburbanites against the bikes lanes that are not even present in their own neighborhoods.

[–] doylio 2 points 1 month ago

In Canada it's a politically successful strategy to agitate the suburbs

This is true and depressing. But "the gov't will probably undo this" does not mean we shouldn't try