- Do you support congestion charging? PT is a *reverse* congestion charge (a fee for using the less congestion option)
- Do you support congestion charging? PT is a *reverse* congestion charge (a fee for using the less congestion option)
- Your map is the result of life under fares. And yet, the coverage is still bad. Clearly fare levels aren’t the determinant of service quality
- Your map is the result of life under fares. And yet, the coverage is still bad. Clearly fare levels aren’t the determinant of service quality
- Fallacy of composition (plenty of poorer people in wealthier areas)
- All infrastructure coverage looks like this. Is charging more for public schools, hospitals and libraries a win for equality because there’s more in wealthier areas? No - nor is it for pt.
- Fallacy of composition (plenty of poorer people in wealthier areas)
- All infrastructure coverage looks like this. Is charging more for public schools, hospitals and libraries a win for equality because there’s more in wealthier areas? No - nor is it for pt.
It’s also way better for equality because regular tax is much more progressive than fares.
It’s also way better for equality because regular tax is much more progressive than fares.
It is the reverse - replacing fare revenue with traditional tax revenue means more money for services by eliminating ticketing and enforcement costs.
It is the reverse - replacing fare revenue with traditional tax revenue means more money for services by eliminating ticketing and enforcement costs.
"The average density of dwellings is 50 per hectare". What you've missed is that new infill is far higher density than this.
This lovely medium density Nightingale development is 400 per hectare, for instance. www.sixdegrees.com.au/projects/nig...
"The average density of dwellings is 50 per hectare". What you've missed is that new infill is far higher density than this.
This lovely medium density Nightingale development is 400 per hectare, for instance. www.sixdegrees.com.au/projects/nig...
If we assume infill housing is 10-20x higher density than our existing low density sprawl, that's more like 1-2 CBDs of infill per year, which seems... totally reasonable?
Low density means more room for infill, not less!
If we assume infill housing is 10-20x higher density than our existing low density sprawl, that's more like 1-2 CBDs of infill per year, which seems... totally reasonable?
Low density means more room for infill, not less!
"The average density of dwellings is 50 per hectare". What you've missed is that new infill is far higher density than this.
This lovely medium density Nightingale development is 400 per hectare, for instance. www.sixdegrees.com.au/projects/nig...
"The average density of dwellings is 50 per hectare". What you've missed is that new infill is far higher density than this.
This lovely medium density Nightingale development is 400 per hectare, for instance. www.sixdegrees.com.au/projects/nig...
This typical Nightingale development for instance has 400 apartments per hectare - far higher than 50. www.sixdegrees.com.au/projects/nig...
This typical Nightingale development for instance has 400 apartments per hectare - far higher than 50. www.sixdegrees.com.au/projects/nig...
My background is merely that I vote in both NZ and Australian elections, in NZ my vote goes directly to more rep for my choice, in Australia it doesn't, and I think that's bad!
Why is that not a valid perspective?
My background is merely that I vote in both NZ and Australian elections, in NZ my vote goes directly to more rep for my choice, in Australia it doesn't, and I think that's bad!
Why is that not a valid perspective?
People don't have to like it, but I think it's a great way of quantifying:
- non proportionality
- why swing seats matter
The main objection seems to be that it's "unorthodox". But who cares, if it leads to valid conclusions?
People don't have to like it, but I think it's a great way of quantifying:
- non proportionality
- why swing seats matter
The main objection seems to be that it's "unorthodox". But who cares, if it leads to valid conclusions?