Here are some of the reasons he
recently put forward in favour of the controversial project:
1. You would stop using your bike. Hmm, riding a bike keeps people in shape. In Edinburgh bus corridors
double up as bike lanes. And here's what the
rush hour looks like in Copenhagen where 45% travel by bike to school or work.
2. You would stop travelling by bus. Ok, so the tram will be a door-to-destination service. Interesting. To say the least.
3. Won't need to wake up early to wait for a bus God only knows when it's arriving. And not being sure you'll have a seat. How will we get to a tram station if we don't live near one? Schedules can be improved, posted at bus stops and bus routes reassigned accordingly. We can also reserve 20% of the front seats of buses for people over 60. Buses can be
very comfortable too.
4. You will know when you arrive at your destination. Again these can be fixed by penalising buses that are late for no good reason. Significantly curbing the unchecked growth of private cars won't hurt either.
5. You won't be stuck in traffic anymore. There's traffic everywhere now and at hours we never had it before. A proof that our transportation policy is too primitive. Blame it to a great extent on a car pool that's growing in an uncontrolled fashion.