Ontario government floats major changes to several Toronto transit projects
Amid ongoing talks between the Ontario government and the City of Toronto about uploading the TTC’s subway system, newly released documents from the province raise the possibility of major changes to several transit projects.
Toronto city council is set to vote during its meeting on Wednesday on whether to spend $2 million towards hiring additional staff and obtaining third-party advice as negotiations continue between the province and the city. However, on Tuesday, officials posted additional letters and reports relating to the upload discussions on the city’s website.
In a letter sent to city manager Chris Murray and TTC CEO Rick Leary on Friday, Deputy Minister of Transportation Shelley Tapp and Michael Lindsay, a special adviser to the Ontario cabinet on transit uploading, said the two levels of government “are not aligned” when it comes to transit expansion and that differences are “likely to persist” until the design and building of the projects are transferred to the Ontario government.
Among the differences cited is the Scarborough subway extension. The City of Toronto’s plan, after several contentious debates, has been to extend the Line 2 subway by a stop to Scarborough Town Centre from Kennedy Station. However, the Doug Ford government wants to see three stations as part of the extension — something promised during the 2018 provincial election, along with an upload of the subway system.
Tapp and Lindsay also said the Ontario government wants to see a proposed western extension of the Eglinton Crosstown LRT line built underground instead of along Eglinton Avenue West, something that could mean a major cost increase.
When it comes to the Downtown Relief Line, the province wants to see “alternative delivery methods” for a subway line that is “not beholden to the requirements of the technologically outdated Line 2.” Officials also want design work for the potential Yonge subway line extension expedited so subway service into York region could begin sooner.
“The province is actively considering significant financial commitments towards these critical expansion projects,” Tapp and Lindsay wrote.
“With major financial commitments by the government of Ontario will come with the expectation that the province will have a leadership role in planning, design and delivery of these projects.”
A public consultation process by the City of Toronto is set to get underway in May.
More to come.
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