Article
Subway dreams give way to LRT reality
Preferred options for Scarborough councillors is LRT development
SUSAN O'NEILL
Aug. 22, 2006
Building a Scarborough subway, which was unanimously supported by local councillors, is no longer being hailed as the preferred option to replace the aging Scarborough rapid transit line.
Several Scarborough councillors, who met Tuesday with Toronto Transit Commission (TTC) officials in a closed-door meeting to discuss transit options for the area, are now saying that creating a network of LRT lines is the way to go.
"I think today's meeting is really the death of the Scarborough subway and the birth of massive public transit in Scarborough. And that, for me, is incredibly exciting," TTC Commissioner and Ward 38 Councillor Glenn De Baeremaeker (Scarborough Centre) said following the meeting at the Scarborough Civic Centre.
"I think for Scarborough this is huge. This is big news."
The TTC has been reviewing options to replace the aging RT line by 2015.
And, according to a staff report that will be presented to commissioners next week, a subway is not the best option.
It was less than a year ago that Scarborough councillors gathered at Kennedy Station to launch a campaign calling for a new Scarborough subway to replace the RT, which opened in 1985 and runs between Kennedy Road and the Scarborough Town Centre. The Scarborough Mirror launched its own campaign early last fall and later presented Scarborough MPPs with thousands of citizen signatures calling for a new subway to replace the LRT.
"We all wanted the subway but I think cold, hard reality has set in," De Baeremaeker said.
Ward 37 Councillor Michael Thompson (Scarborough Centre) maintains councillors have to be "prudent and practical" when examining options for the future of transit in the area.
"It would be ideal to have the complete network and the subway," he said, adding that option isn't financially possible.
Thompson added that TTC staff is recommending a network of services to meet the area's needs rather than the creation of one costly subway line.
De Baeremaeker said the councillors in attendance at Tuesday's briefing agreed in principle that the subway simply isn't a financially sound option for the area's future transit needs.
"We didn't take a vote but I think after today's meeting, there won't be a Scarborough subway," De Baeremaeker said, adding that creating a series of light rail transit (LRT) lines is not only more economical, but would serve all of Scarborough.
De Baeremaeker reported that the TTC can either build one subway, at a cost of $1.2 billion, or build nine LRT lines at a cost of $1 billion.
"We could service 10 times as many people for the same amount of money," De Baeremaeker said, adding, "We will cover the city of Scarborough like a spider web."
He reported that the TTC could build LRT lines to replace the current Scarborough RT and to service riders along Kingston Road, Danforth Avenue, Eglinton Avenue, Lawrence Avenue, Sheppard Avenue, the Finch Avenue hydro corridor and along portions of Markham and McCowan roads.
An LRT line is an express lane dedicated solely to transit, similar to the right-of-way that's being created for the St. Clair streetcar, De Baeremaeker said.
Meanwhile, Thompson reported that Scarborough councillors will meet Friday to decide on a position regarding the subway and the TTC staff recommendations, which will be released publicly on Thursday.
"I think it's something we really need to take a closer look at," Thompson said of the creation of a broad network of bus and light rail systems across Scarborough.
Thompson said he's hoping Scarborough councillors will present a united front at the TTC meeting next week when staff is due to report on options for replacing the RT line by 2015.