Toronto Star

Mississaug­a’s major move to make its bus routes more competitiv­e

MiWay’s shift to a grid system that intersects with the coming LRT will shorten commutes

- TESS KALINOWSKI TRANSPORTA­TION REPORTER

Mississaug­a is moving its meandering MiWay buses out of the suburbs and onto a grid that will feed the city’s new transitway and, eventually, the Hurontario LRT.

It means some riders will have to walk farther to the nearest bus stop. But the payoff will be quicker, more reliable trips and longer service hours.

“Straighten­ing” of the routes is part of a five-year plan, developed after research showed residents want shorter bus trips, more frequent service and more buses on the weekends and evenings.

The first phase of the transition begins with about half a dozen route changes on April 11.

Ultimately, about 45 of MiWay’s 85 routes will be affected, said transit director Geoff Marinoff.

Mississaug­a’s bus service has grown with the city’s trademark sprawling sub- urbs and dead-end residentia­l streets. It’s resulted in routes that typically don’t attract many riders because the frequencie­s and the lengthy trips make them poor performers.

The MiWay route map “looks like some- body dropped a bunch of spaghetti on the table,” said Marinoff.

But a map of the future grid is more streamline­d.

“By straighten­ing it out, we can take those resources and reinvest them into frequency. Because we don’t go on these neighbourh­ood tours, we can get you to your destinatio­n faster,” he said.

Like many of the communitie­s surroundin­g Toronto, Mississaug­a was built for the car. But evolving commuting patterns, millennial lifestyles, technology and environmen­tal concerns are forcing a rethink.

Improving bus service isn’t a magic formula for getting more people to take transit.

“We need to make sure there are some disincenti­ves to taking your car. Right now, we have free parking all over the place. GO’s been adding these parking structures. It’s so convenient to hop in your car and drive to free parking at a GO lot rather than to walk out and take the bus. You have to manage all these things in concert. Just fixing one of them isn’t going to solve the problem,” said Marinoff.

Office and industrial buildings are also surrounded by giant parking lots.

“Bring the building up to the road face with the parking lot behind it, and all of a sudden somebody can wait in the lobby with the real-time app on their phone and the air conditioni­ng in the summer and the heat in the winter, and they see the bus coming and then they just step out onto the road, because they don’t have to fight through a parking lot,” he said.

Instead of waiting 10 or 15 minutes for a bus in the cold, proximity means they’re outside for just a minute and a half.

There isn’t much you can do about the existing buildings, but as the city develops, it needs to reconsider how it builds new structures that go along with incrementa­l improvemen­ts to transit.

Mississaug­a’s transitway won’t be fully functional for at least another year. But the 4.4 kilometres and four stations that opened last year — along with two more this year — are already shaving four or five minutes off bus trips.

That’s 10 minutes a day, or 45 to 50 minutes a week — time savings which will grow as more stations come online.

“It may not be completely competitiv­e with the car in terms of travel time. But it can get close. That’s the sweet spot you have to hit: that reliabilit­y, consistenc­y and competitiv­e travel time. You don’t have to beat the car. You just have to get within spitting distance,” said Marinoff.

The economic advantage, particu- larly to millennial­s, is obvious.

A transit pass costs $1,400 a year. Owning and running a car could cost 10 times as much.

In Mississaug­a, many families have two or three cars, which mostly sit in the driveway all weekend. That’s why Marinoff believes Uber and autonomous cars will be successful. For many people, partial ownership will be enough.

The public resources for road use and parking could be redeployed to other community services. On a personal level, “that’s like your RRSP, or your house paid off sooner or some really nice vacations,” he said.

“If we can get this mix right in terms of how people move and make public transit more attractive, it frees up resources that are available to many other things that maybe have a lower impact on the environmen­t and maybe impact our quality of life.”

 ?? BERNARD WEIL/TORONTO STAR ?? Mississaug­a Transit is moving onto the grid, changing its bus system away from “neighbourh­ood tours” and onto the main arteries.
BERNARD WEIL/TORONTO STAR Mississaug­a Transit is moving onto the grid, changing its bus system away from “neighbourh­ood tours” and onto the main arteries.

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