Last fall, the city’s King St. transit corridor had the same gridlock found everywhere else in the city. Now, Toronto officials are pointing to encouraging numbers showing the problem is turning around. Matthew Bingley explains what needs to happen to hold onto the progress.
- Rogers to deploy 5G cameras, sensors to manage traffic at five Toronto intersections
- Traffic agents cost Toronto thousands every week. Why does the city need them?
- Toronto’s King Street traffic solution yields remarkable short-term results