Commentaire
August 22, 2020
Hon. Jeff Yurek
Ministry of the Environment, Conservation and Parks
5th Floor, 777 Bay Street
Toronto, ON M7A 2J3
RE: Greater Toronto Area West Corridor Project (HWY 413)
Dear Minister,
The Ontario government’s proposed GTA West Corridor (Highway 413) is redundant and unnecessary use of taxpayer dollars.
“Highway 413 is a bad investment for the citizens of Ontario. It would damage the environment, consume land for low-value uses, promote urban sprawl, not solve traffic congestion and move Ontario away from its climate change goals,” ⏤Peter Miasek, President of Transport Action Ontario
Currently Highway 407 (another toll highway) is underused and there is an expansion project underway for the 401. Yet the province is proposing to build another east-west toll highway just 15 km away.
Building a new highway gets more polluting cars on the road, and usually does nothing to relieve congestion over time. In fact, an expert panel study found the highway would only save drivers 30-60 seconds per trip. This project would cost Ontario taxpayers billions, and it would mean less money is available to invest in crucial public transit. It would degrade the parts of the Credit River and Humber River watersheds that flow into Lake Ontario – a source of drinking water for millions of GTA residents.
At 50 km long the 413 highway and would pave over 2,000 acres of Class 1 and Class 2 farmland – among Ontario’s most productive farmland.
After EA studies and a review by an expert panel the project was abandoned by the Ontario government as more innovative, cost-effective, long term, and sustainable solutions were proposed which were supported by surrounding municipalities. These solutions propel the province forward by promoting more sustainable and resilient communities.
Growth and Innovation in Proposed Alternatives:
A report released this week courtesy of Environmental Defense, Sustainable Vaughn, and Transport Action Ontario demonstrates that investments in GO Transit, light rail, bus, and rapid transit projects in the western GTA could move four times as many people as the proposed 413 highway, at a comparable cost. The transportation alternatives suggested in this report, together with innovative land use ideas like Brampton’s urban boulevard concept, are a much better investment of tax dollars.
In July 2020, Brampton Council voted unanimously in support of a walkable, bike-friendly, higher density, boulevard concept in place of the proposed Highway 413, reinforcing that the highway is a bad fit for the region.
Recommendations to this project include:
- Committing to public transit investment, including full GO Regional Express Rail on the Kitchener and Milton corridors, a new GO corridor to Bolton, and increased bus rapid transit or light rail transit for Vaughan, Brampton and Mississauga.
- Transportation Demand Management and other technical initiatives to improve the operational efficiencies of the existing transportation network.
- Increased rail/road grade separations to facilitate the movement of goods.
- Continued monitoring and modelling, especially as new regional population and employment figures are developed by the Province as input to upcoming Municipal Comprehensive Reviews, and as transportation technologies and economic practices evolve.
- Truck Priority on Hwy 407, highlighted by the Expert panel’s analyses showed that providing truck priority on Hwy 407 through additional highway capacity or subsidy (e.g., trucks pay no toll) would deliver travel time benefits that are similar to those of the proposed GTAW corridor.
Weighing the Risks:
The adverse environmental impacts of a new transportation corridor of this size are significant, and include impacts to the natural environment such as rivers, wetlands and forests, loss of thousands of hectares of prime agricultural lands including about 1000 hectares in the Greenbelt, environmental damage from road salt, air pollution affecting nearby residents and increased greenhouse gas emissions.
We don’t need another highway, more cars, and more pollution. Transportation is the largest source of carbon emissions in Ontario. In addition, recent modeling estimated that pollution from traffic causes almost 900 premature deaths per year in the Greater Toronto and Hamilton Area (GTHA).
“The government has an outdated view of how to boost Ontario’s economy – a new highway, more sprawl, and more pollution isn’t the answer” ⏤Keith Brooks, Programs Director with Environmental Defence
As our economy looks towards a strong recovery from the global pandemic, and without major tax increases, there is limited funds in the Province to support the construction of the GTA-West Highway while also investing in critical public transit infrastructure projects. Public transit infrastructure investment allows the Province to share the capital cost of projects with their municipal and federal counterparts while preparing for a low carbon future.
With the current shift in transportation technology, remote work options and climate change mandates, supporting another unnecessary highway project at the cost of future resilience, ecosystem services and public health, would not only condemning future taxpayers to pay for an outdated model that was already deemed unjustified years ago, but is directly at odds with progress. This project should not be given any further consideration. Please cancel it.
Soumis le 22 août 2020 7:08 PM
Commentaire sur
Règlement proposé pour un processus d’évaluation environnementale simplifié pour le projet du couloir ouest de la région du Grand Toronto du ministère des Transports
Numéro du REO
019-1882
Identifiant (ID) du commentaire
47669
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