the reality is, they will be sold off for pennies on the dollar. And either Schwarzenegger or his Royal highness the great Campbell could care less
... there was great potential in the Hydrogen power.
It was a real life experiment and had it worked there would have been high fives all round. Not to mention a large industry for BC. And the cost was nothing compared to what has been spent trying to make electric cars work.
There's great potential in teleportation as well. A fiscally prudent government would wait until the potential is, at least, realistically achievable before they throw money at it. Seems to me Liberals could have used the same argument for the gun registry....it had great potential you know...
No doubt and if there was a good chance of success, business would have been all over it and there would have been no need for the governments money.
Ya gotta love how some of the pretend conservatives support government intervention when it's their man doing the intervening.
Really a case could be made that public transportation is a waste of tax payer's money.
I work in industries that are constantly looking for new and better ways to do things. Some work, most don't. But every once in a while a game changer comes along.
Depends on location. Generally speaking, only fools would argue against public transportation in major cities.
Depends on location. Generally speaking, only fools would argue against public transportation in major cities.
Done with private money no doubt.....or are you being subsidized as well?
Depends on wether you can use it or not.
No, it doesn't but you can take solace in the fact that you're not the first person to get that wrong.
ANytime you are forced to pay for something you can not use is a waste.
Nonsense. I've never needed the fire department but my home insurance is less because we have one. It's silly to think you don't benefit from a transit system simply because you don't use it.
Explain how I benefit from paying for public transit I never use. Wouldn't it make more sense if the people that use it pay for it?
The money was not pissed away by any means. It is unfortunate that it didn't work out as planned but there was great potential in the Hydrogen power. It was a real life experiment and had it worked there would have been high fives all round. Not to mention a large industry for BC. And the cost was nothing compared to what has been spent trying to make electric cars work.
We can no longer drive, cannot get on a bus nor have my power walker put into the trunk of a cab. In our region we have something public named 'handivan'. That makes it possible to have appointments at the hospital, family doctor, dentist and so on. Very cheaply though it obviously costs the region much more than we pay. Without something like 'handivsn service and subsidised too many disabled folk would be unable to have such essential appointments.
Well, the numbers would depend on how the system is run, the size of the city, how the routes are run etc....but generally speaking, I saw something recently where the cost of traffic congestion alone would cost the economy in the US 21 billion without public transportation. One can only imagine what the city of Vancouver would have to spend to improve major arteries if they did away with public transportation. I'm sure parking prices wouldn't drop.
Access to public transportation benefits businesses as it expands the available workforce.
Your problem is that you are looking for a direct benefit. That may or may not exist, depending on where you live. You are receiving indirect benefits regardless of where you live. I live in a rural area without public transportation of any kind. The Edmonton transit system reduces the amount of money needed for road construction and repair which means there is more provincial dollars for our municipality