Medicine Hat News

On essential infrastruc­ture

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Without inside knowledge of city finances and policy planning I am left to frame my thoughts as questions. What is infrastruc­ture? What is essential infrastruc­ture? Libraries? Museums? Recreation­al facilities? All very necessary but not essential.

Mass transit? For some it is very essential. Why is it losing money? Can its losses be absorbed by profits from non-essential services? Low ridership? Would lower costper-ride increase usage and potentiall­y profits? Would smaller buses for evenings and weekends work or changing half-hour pickups to one hour?

I'm sure lots of ideas were discussed but there must be a better way than just reaching for the scissors when you see red on the bottom line. Two things bothered me when discussing the issues with a transit manager at a recent open house.

The first, she had no issues with me walking over a mile to the FLC for pickup and another mile home on a wintery Saturday over snow and ice in -30 C weather on aging knees. Do I use the bus on Saturdays? Well, I did.

Second, she couldn’t understand that paying more than $70 a month for a pass with a reduction of eight days and 30 evenings wasn’t good economics. I’ll pass on the pass.

Now, to be honest, there were also some changes that I did like and I think will work well. But let the users decide, not those that stress about profits and margins. Now I have paid city taxes for almost 40 years and if I saw just one rider on a bus at 9 p.m. and I felt if it was important for that person to get where they needed, then it was important to me. That is the bottom line of essential infrastruc­ture.

Ken Arnott Medicine Hat

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