I have not read the 2013 document which is why I'm asking questions here. If people find the questions I'm asking annoying or frustrating feel free to ignore. It's an open forum.
No problem, I was just pointing to the contradictory positions taken up by the City of Ottawa.
For some context see:
http://www.ottawalife.com/article/canadas-earliest-and-most-recent-railway-scandals?c=9
I'm not from the Ottawa area so I've only seen media reports on the City's plans for Phase 1 and Phase 2 and only recently read (mostly here) of the Moose proposal.
In Mr. Watson's 2016 year-end interview with
Metro published on 12 December he is quoted as saying: "the city has to keep thinking decades out and the next stop should be Gatineau. “We don’t have the money for it and we haven’t even done an environmental assessment, but I think when you’re looking at transit, you have to be looking long term,” he said. “I see Phase 4 as going into Gatineau through the Prince of Wales Bridge connecting their Rapibus system to our train system.”
Let's compare Mr. Watson's 2016 vision with the 2013 Interprovincial Transit Strategy co-authored by the professional transportation planners from the cities of Ottawa and Gatineau, together with the two global engineering companies AECOM and MMM they had under contract, together with the overall mandate and coordination of the NCC. The strategy can be downloaded from
Gatineau's STO website. However it's telling that it is nowhere to be found on City of Ottawa or OC-Transpo websites.
Page 75 of the Stategy's final report lists "
Medium Term Actions (by 2018)" as including "O-train to Gatineau via Prince of Wales Bridge". Page 51 states: "An extension of the current O-Train across the Prince of Wales Bridge was raised frequently during the various public and stakeholder study meetings." And Page 82 of the Conclusions section recommended that the cities and the NCC "Take steps to provide an extension of the O-Train / North-South LRT to Gatineau via the Prince of Wales Bridge. ... An O-Train extension to Hull via the Prince of Wales Bridge in the medium term could provide relief to existing core area transit infrastructure and better connect non-downtown destinations to improve overall network connectivity."
That strategy resulted from five years of collaborative study and public consultation. Yet when it was published in the spring of 2013 Mr. Watson immediately expressed his opposition to these recommendations. He made the following statement to a Le Droit reporter at the time: « Ce n'est pas notre priorité d'offrir un service ferroviaire à une autreville, dans ne autre province. » [Translation: "It's not our priority to offer a rail service to some other city in some other province."] Source:
http://www.lapresse.ca/le-droit/act...t-la-pour-rester-insiste-le-maire-dottawa.php As a result, the City of Ottawa’s current Transportation Master Plan passed by Council contradicts City staff's own Interprovincial Transit Strategy by opposing any use of the bridge for passenger rail transit for 15 or 20 years, long after the terms of the current politicians.
But also at present, the Mayor has the votes on Council, full federal and provincial funding, and as best I can tell the City intends to start the RFP process this year for Phase 2. That's a lot more than can be said for other municipalities in Ontario. So are you essentially counting on the CTA intervening and slowing down or blocking the City's Phase 2 plan in order to get more time to convince them to adopt the Moose Plan?
MOOSE is not trying to "convince them to adopt the Moose Plan". We are not lobbyists. We are simply developing a business that implements that part of City of Ottawa's own plans that synergise with the plans of the NCC and Gatineau. And we believe we have come up with a way to finance an attractive, safe and highly affordable metropolitan-scale passenger rail service without dependence on the public purse. So we're making arrangments on capital markets, and we're in the midst our regulatory filing for authorization to develop this service in conformance with all applicable laws.
In the meantime we are counting on the City of Ottawa to conform with the Constitution of Canada. and with the Canada Transportation Act. When they don't, MOOSE expects the federal regulator to fulfill the intent of Parliament. See:
http://ottawaconstructionnews.com/l...ing_wp_cron=1487725529.5092608928680419921875
We also think it is entirely reasonable to expect the City of Ottawa Council to respect what their own professional staff, consultants and focus-group participants recommended in the 2013 Interprovincial Transit Strategy. And that's consistent with what their transit professionals have been recommending all the way back to the original plan of the O-Train, which was to operate through to Gatineau.
https://www.otc-cta.gc.ca/eng/ruling/745-r-2000 The federal Certificate of Fitness that the O-Train operates under today still states that it goes to Quebec.
Hope those references are useful.
Joseph Potvin
Director General | Directeur général
Moose Consortium (Mobility Ottawa-Outaouais: Systems & Enterprises) |
www.letsgomoose.com
Consortium Moose (Mobilité Outaouais-Ottawa: Systèmes & Enterprises) |
www.onyvamoose.com