I genuinely do see both sides of the coin here. I am okay with the project so long as additional parameters are met:
1. A transit route, whether BRT with capability to upgrade to heavy rail in the future, is incorporated into the ROW.
2. Ecologically sensitive areas are retained and protected from development.
3. TOD is prioritized in the areas surrounding the 413 route, namely Georgetown, NW Mississauga, Brampton, Caledon-Bolton and Vaughan. Don't allow for heavy sprawl and tract housing to be built along the highways route. Focus on densifying the aforementioned municipalities along already existing avenues in the form of townhomes, row houses and duplexes instead of crappy, high-priced, wannabe luxury condos.
4. 413 is tolled for a given number of years in a manner that generates revenue for the province to support transit but also allows for use by logistics companies and trucks.
The concern with farmland and ecologically sensitive areas is valid and I worry the Ford government won't pay much mind to points 1 - 3 and let the developers run rampant. Realistically there are market constraints within the GTA related to commercial RE capacity for warehousing, e-commerce, logistics and manufacturing. The land surrounding this highway should be prioritized for commercial use given the lack of availability in already developed areas of the GTHA while also protecting these eco-sensitive areas.
Furthermore, current zoning patterns have already earmarked the land along this route for development. Over time, Oakville, Milton, NW Mississauga, Brampton, Caledon, Bolton and Kleinberg will become interconnected. It should not be endless, low-density tract housing, much of which already exists in certain parts of Caledon already.