One more analysis with the maps. Isolating just the areas of Toronto that would be no longer be within a five-minute walk of late evening TTC service, should the proposed cuts proceed, then taking the sum of the proportion of all the census zones these areas intersect with, I get a decent approximation of how many people would actually no longer have late evening TTC service.
That number?
160,000
Is this major? Roughly 1 in 15 Torontonians may be losing late evening TTC service. That’s pretty major to me. The commission meeting to decide on these cuts is February 2nd.

One more analysis with the maps. Isolating just the areas of Toronto that would be no longer be within a five-minute walk of late evening TTC service, should the proposed cuts proceed, then taking the sum of the proportion of all the census zones these areas intersect with, I get a decent approximation of how many people would actually no longer have late evening TTC service.

That number?

160,000

Is this major? Roughly 1 in 15 Torontonians may be losing late evening TTC service. That’s pretty major to me. The commission meeting to decide on these cuts is February 2nd.

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  1. zomgblog said: Can I ask the math behind this?
  2. 299bloorcallcontrol posted this

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