From:
www.insidetoronto.ca/to/s...carborough
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Scarborough residents, councillors holding out for subway
Report offers three options for replacing Scarborough LRT
MIKE ADLER'Įmadler@insidetoronto.com
Apr. 25, 2006
Even after strong hints they should compromise on replacing the Scarborough Light Rapid Transit line, local councillors seemed determined Monday night that nothing less than a subway will do.'
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For too long, we'Äôve played second fiddle'
to other parts of the city, declared Ward 37 Councillor Michael Thompson (Scarborough Centre), chair of the Scarborough Community Council. '
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Clearly, when you build subways there is a great opportunity for economic growth.'
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Thompson said his Scarborough colleagues would match his support for a quick decision by the city and province to replace the aging and separate six-stop RT with a two-stop extension to the Bloor-Danforth line.'
Along with scores of residents wearing pro-Scarborough Subway stickers paid for by councillors, Thompson had just finished listening to veteran consultant Richard Soberman, who warned the city would have to decide to build the subway almost immediately 'Äî right after this fall'Äôs municipal election 'Äî if it hoped to avoid years with no rapid-transit service along the route.'
Even so, the subway extension would lose the current RT stops at McCowan Road, Midland Avenue and Ellesmere Road and cost $1.2 billion 'Äî not including the price of moving utilities and acquiring property for what would have to be a new route.'
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This is a big ticket item,'
Soberman said, reminding his audience at Scarborough Civic Centre '
the province has announced they are going to fund a new subway (to York University) nowhere near Scarborough.'
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Future needs on the route can be met by modifying the RT to the more modern standards of Vancouver'Äôs SkyTrain for $360 million or replacing it with an expandable light-rail system for $500 million, Soberman said.'
And Scarborough'Äôs leaders, he implied, may be better off proposing a package that accepts the least-expensive option and applies the $900 million difference to advancing the RT to Malvern and extending the Sheppard subway line to Scarborough Town Centre. '
Otherwise, said Soberman, '
What you make on the apples you might lose on the oranges.'
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Thompson, however, said he rode the SkyTrain and wasn'Äôt impressed. '
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We'Äôve been down this road before'
in the 1980s, when the province supported RT instead of a subway, he said. Now both have '
a second chance to make the right decision.'
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Renewing the RT with larger cars '
would be a waste of money,'
Thompson argued. '
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Time for the status quo is over.'
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At the meeting, Scarborough Centre MPP Brad Duguid said he continues to be an advocate in the provincial government for a subway to Scarborough but added, '
people shouldn'Äôt be putting any false deadlines (forward) in terms of getting higher levels of government to commit to this project.'
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Certainly, many are less than pleased with the current RT, which can'Äôt even handle daily loads without diverting riders to buses. Besides the time-consuming transfer point at Kennedy station, residents complained that buses are hard to reach at some stations and other stations are all but impossible for anyone except bus passengers to enter.'
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For 15 years I'Äôve put up with that thing,'
said Joe Healy, a resident who described the RT as being '
like an evil concrete snake that cuts across Scarborough.'
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The planet needs a way to get people out of their cars and '
the saddest thing that ever happened'
was the city'Äôs decision to stop building subways. '
Politicians should be looking at spending a lot more than $1.2 billion on transit improvements in Scarborough, Healy told Duguid. '
Morningside Heights resident Jeff Sorensen said it took him more than 40 minutes to reach Scarborough Town Centre on a bus from his home in northeast Scarborough. '
Extending the Sheppard line to the Scarborough Town Centre will take pressure off the RT and give commuters a chance to reach Yonge Street from the heart of Scarborough in minutes, he said.