M II A II R II K
Senior Member
David Miller: Toronto's future rides on commitment to transit
Apr 09 2010
Tess Kalinowski
Read More: http://www.thestar.com/news/gta/ttc...des-on-faltering-commitment-to-transit-miller
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It was to have been his legacy, a suburban light rail plan that would attract European-style mid-rise development to Toronto’s suburban avenues. Along the way it would revolutionize the commutes and connections of residents in the city’s most underserviced neighbourhoods. Now as David Miller’s Transit City plan appears to be falling off the tracks, the mayor says there’s still time to save the city from a bleak descent into previously unimagined smoggy gridlock.
“The alternatives on the table are two: One is, our roads continue to get more and more crowded, the other is Transit City,†said Miller. In an exclusive interview with the Toronto Star last week, he conjured an image akin to a traffic-riddled apocalypse — a Toronto where every road resembles Highway 7 at rush hour, developers put the squeeze on established neighbourhoods, and the city’s most vulnerable residents pay for the province’s shortsighted failure to commit to transit.
People will sit in cars and bus service will deteriorate as the roads become increasingly choked by traffic serving 1 million additional residents in 20 years, said Miller. “A single mum — like my mum, who worked three jobs and went to school so she could get her degree and get paid decently — will be stuck on the bus and probably won’t even be able to work a third job. So she’ll be working two (jobs) and she certainly won’t be able to go back to school. She’ll be stuck on the bus, sitting in traffic waiting to get home,†he said.
Miller, whose term ends this fall, is running out of time to persuade the province to reverse the blow it dealt Transit City two weeks ago. That’s when the provincial budget directed its regional transit agency Metrolinx, to defer $4 billion of the $9.5 billion it had committed to building light rail on Sheppard, Finch and Eglinton, renovating the SRT and expanding bus rapid transit in York Region over the next five years. The province says it’s simply a slowdown. Miller says it will likely mean the end of one or more lines.
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Apr 09 2010
Tess Kalinowski
Read More: http://www.thestar.com/news/gta/ttc...des-on-faltering-commitment-to-transit-miller
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It was to have been his legacy, a suburban light rail plan that would attract European-style mid-rise development to Toronto’s suburban avenues. Along the way it would revolutionize the commutes and connections of residents in the city’s most underserviced neighbourhoods. Now as David Miller’s Transit City plan appears to be falling off the tracks, the mayor says there’s still time to save the city from a bleak descent into previously unimagined smoggy gridlock.
“The alternatives on the table are two: One is, our roads continue to get more and more crowded, the other is Transit City,†said Miller. In an exclusive interview with the Toronto Star last week, he conjured an image akin to a traffic-riddled apocalypse — a Toronto where every road resembles Highway 7 at rush hour, developers put the squeeze on established neighbourhoods, and the city’s most vulnerable residents pay for the province’s shortsighted failure to commit to transit.
People will sit in cars and bus service will deteriorate as the roads become increasingly choked by traffic serving 1 million additional residents in 20 years, said Miller. “A single mum — like my mum, who worked three jobs and went to school so she could get her degree and get paid decently — will be stuck on the bus and probably won’t even be able to work a third job. So she’ll be working two (jobs) and she certainly won’t be able to go back to school. She’ll be stuck on the bus, sitting in traffic waiting to get home,†he said.
Miller, whose term ends this fall, is running out of time to persuade the province to reverse the blow it dealt Transit City two weeks ago. That’s when the provincial budget directed its regional transit agency Metrolinx, to defer $4 billion of the $9.5 billion it had committed to building light rail on Sheppard, Finch and Eglinton, renovating the SRT and expanding bus rapid transit in York Region over the next five years. The province says it’s simply a slowdown. Miller says it will likely mean the end of one or more lines.
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