Tolls strike fear, loathing in hearts of car junkies
Toronto Star
January 23, 2008
Christopher Hume
Canada and Ontario have grown old before their time. Compared to other nations we are young, not even middle-aged, but as a culture we have become tired and sclerotic, slow to respond and slower still to act.
Evidence is everywhere around us. It can be seen in our failure to keep pace with the rest of the world in everything from environmental policy to self-governance.
The most recent example was the unseemly rush at Queen's Park to dismiss the report prepared by Trent University economist Harry Kitchen. Provincial politicians lined up to dump on a document that essentially proposes that those who use Ontario highways should pay for the privilege.
Public transit riders have been familiar with the concept since the beginning; they're called fares, and everyone who rides the rails pays them. In Toronto, fares on the much-unfunded TTC rank among the highest in North America.
But for some reason, those who ride the roads have always been exempt from almost any sort of user fee beyond gas taxes, which, conveniently, are about half what they are in Europe and much of the civilized world. (This doesn't include the U.S., a country so addicted to petroleum that even failed oilman-turned-president George W. Bush admits his people need help.)
That's why long faces greeted Kitchen's suggestion that we might want to consider putting tolls on the 400-series highways and others including the QEW, the Don Valley Parkway and the Gardiner Expressway. He also proposes increasing the fuel tax. And in a move that can be counted on to strike fear and loathing into the heart of every driver in the region, Kitchen recommends municipalities levy a tax on non-residential parking spaces. About time, too.
In many parts of the world, such notions are acceptable, if not popular, because they're necessary. By reducing the number of cars and trucks, we help clean the air and alleviate the growing congestion crisis. It's true the other side of this coin is adequate public transit, something we let go 30 years ago. But as Kitchen argues, the $1 billion-plus raised by the taxes could go straight to the Better Way(s).
For now, those charged with the responsibility for updating provincial transit, people such as Metrolinx chair Rob MacIsaac, have next to nothing to show for their efforts. But then, their real job is to fiddle while Queen's Park burns.
That means smiling a lot, going to conferences, saying the right things and travelling to Madrid to find out how that city manages to build subways at one-quarter what it costs us. Dig a little deeper, though, and it's clear that that's just how Ontario wants it; keep the cost of public transit as high as possible to justify the lack of alternatives. In other words, in this province we can't afford not to drive everywhere. We'd love more subways and an expanded GO system, but they're just too expensive.
And as for Kitchen's proposals, well we can't afford those either. So says no less an expert than former finance minister Greg Sorbara.
"I wouldn't be one who would be recommending increasing taxes," he declared, obviously unaware his logic was as clumsy as his syntax.
Bottom liner, bottom feeder, what's the difference?
Just as we can't afford public transit, we can't afford less pollution, less congestion, smarter environmental laws, improved quality of life or a better future.
Why? Because if we did any of those, that would mean we couldn't afford to pay for parking, highways or gasoline. It's one or the other, they tell us, and in Canada we know what that means.
Christopher Hume can be reached at chume@thestar.ca