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Flaherty backs `transitway'
Jun. 13, 2006. 01:00 AM
BRUCE CAMPION-SMITH
OTTAWA BUREAU
OTTAWA—Greater Toronto needs a major new expressway to serve the swelling urban region and Ottawa is ready to pay a share, federal Finance Minister Jim Flaherty says.
And in a comment that will be music to the ears of transit-boosters, Flaherty said the new roadway should be able to accommodate transit users, too.
"We do have a need for highways outside the city of Toronto.... I wouldn't even call them highways, but they need to be transitways," he said in an interview from Dublin.
"I do not think we'll see a significant public highway built in southern Ontario in the future without public transit as part of that right-of-way," he said.
That vision of a shared roadway is a big change from the past, when dedicated lanes for transit buses have been slow to materialize on Highways 403 and 407.
Flaherty expects transportation to top the agenda today when he meets with key GTA political leaders.
He chairs the Conservatives' Greater Toronto caucus that tonight will meet with Peel Region Chair Emil Kolb, Halton Region Chair Joyce Savoline and Bill Fisch, the chair of York Region.
Flaherty, who represents Whitby-Oshawa, said a major new highway is needed north of the Oak Ridges Moraine, a protected natural feature that runs east-west through the regions around Toronto. But he warned that Ontario can't afford to wait the several decades it took to build the last major expressway, Highway 407, the privately owned toll road.
Asked whether Ottawa would be willing to pony up for this new mega-project, Flaherty replied, "We're partners."
The Conservatives' first budget confirmed $16 billion in infrastructure spending, and Flaherty said upcoming talks with the provinces would determine how the funding is split.
Transportation investments are essential to ensure the GTA and southern Ontario "remain attractive for business."
Flaherty backs `transitway'
Jun. 13, 2006. 01:00 AM
BRUCE CAMPION-SMITH
OTTAWA BUREAU
OTTAWA—Greater Toronto needs a major new expressway to serve the swelling urban region and Ottawa is ready to pay a share, federal Finance Minister Jim Flaherty says.
And in a comment that will be music to the ears of transit-boosters, Flaherty said the new roadway should be able to accommodate transit users, too.
"We do have a need for highways outside the city of Toronto.... I wouldn't even call them highways, but they need to be transitways," he said in an interview from Dublin.
"I do not think we'll see a significant public highway built in southern Ontario in the future without public transit as part of that right-of-way," he said.
That vision of a shared roadway is a big change from the past, when dedicated lanes for transit buses have been slow to materialize on Highways 403 and 407.
Flaherty expects transportation to top the agenda today when he meets with key GTA political leaders.
He chairs the Conservatives' Greater Toronto caucus that tonight will meet with Peel Region Chair Emil Kolb, Halton Region Chair Joyce Savoline and Bill Fisch, the chair of York Region.
Flaherty, who represents Whitby-Oshawa, said a major new highway is needed north of the Oak Ridges Moraine, a protected natural feature that runs east-west through the regions around Toronto. But he warned that Ontario can't afford to wait the several decades it took to build the last major expressway, Highway 407, the privately owned toll road.
Asked whether Ottawa would be willing to pony up for this new mega-project, Flaherty replied, "We're partners."
The Conservatives' first budget confirmed $16 billion in infrastructure spending, and Flaherty said upcoming talks with the provinces would determine how the funding is split.
Transportation investments are essential to ensure the GTA and southern Ontario "remain attractive for business."




