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Engaged Voters

These active users have achieved a basic understanding of terms and definitions related to the topic of Public Transportation

100 Replies

 @9JT3V8QLiberalfrom Alberta  answered…1yr1Y

They already spend enough money on public transportation and most of the income comes from the government itself in my opinion it should stay as it is.

 @9FHP9H8Liberalfrom Ontario  answered…2yrs2Y

Yes, provided the costs are put towards improvement and do not fall to the consumer

 @9FHCTXZfrom British Columbia  answered…2yrs2Y

Yes, but only if the spending goes to be more efficient and effective transportation, improving the different transport systems in cities that need it the most.

 @9CMLG2GLiberalfrom Ontario  answered…2yrs2Y

yes, and provide free transportation(i.e; bus, train ect) for kids under 13 years of age

 @9BS794Zfrom Ontario  answered…2yrs2Y

Yes, and spend more money on police and security for public transit stations.

 @95QSS2JLiberalfrom British Columbia  answered…3yrs3Y

 @95K5YQGfrom British Columbia  answered…3yrs3Y

Yes, it's clear that Canada's cities are going to need investments in transit, and we're going to need this infrastructure to be built as our planet is warming, and we need to reduce our overall CO2 emissions from transportation as much as possible. EVs and fuel-efficient cars can only do so much, but they don't work for everyone as cars are often a big expense for many people.

 @923F9N3from Ontario  answered…3yrs3Y

 @8VSBM2RLiberalfrom Manitoba  answered…4yrs4Y

We want a cleaner environment yet millions of people have to drive their kids to school because there is no more school busses That was a very stupid choice to families and the environment

 @8TJ6F6MLiberalfrom Ontario  answered…4yrs4Y

 @8TGGJBKLiberalfrom Ontario  answered…4yrs4Y

It should be free, the bus driver should be paid a higher wage if the passengers are paying a fee to ride the bus,

 @9D36K4QLiberalfrom British Columbia  answered…2yrs2Y

Yes, but make sure that the city also has the funds to meet it's end of the deal, so that the federal government doesn't have to step in as often, although good transit is in the national interest.

 @9BN6JRTfrom Ontario  answered…2yrs2Y

Yes, but with a mandate for effective and professional Program Management and Systems Engineering. Too many projects lost far too much of this money through incompetence (Ottawa LRT, for example).

 @8Z7T33YLiberalfrom Ontario  answered…3yrs3Y

I'm fine what's going on now, it's just that governments should do a better job of enforcing payment for the transit instead of increasing or decreasing spending.

 @8V45WQXLiberalfrom Ontario  answered…4yrs4Y

 @8FN2LBNLiberalfrom Ontario  answered…5yrs5Y

Yes, but only competently and where necessary. Don't spend for the sake of spending

 @8F2KYGZfrom Ontario  answered…5yrs5Y

 @9CMFTM6from Ontario  answered…2yrs2Y

Yes, it should be environmental friendly and provide free public transportation.

 @99WWP9VLiberalfrom Saskatchewan  answered…2yrs2Y

 @97SL85NLiberalfrom Nova Scotia  answered…2yrs2Y

Yes, and maybe make transportation free for the elderly, and the spending gos towards environmentally friendly solutions.

 @98FPFSYLiberalfrom British Columbia  answered…2yrs2Y

Yes. It's abundantly clear that Canada is going to need more good-quality public transit in the coming years, as our cities will grow but we also need to combat the additional challenges of climate change and rising GHG emissions within cities, which are a problem as most Canadians do live within or just outside of a major city.

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