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Hume: Toronto the Progressive? Not so much

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Hume: Toronto the Progressive? Not so much


May 01 2010

By Christopher Hume

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Read More: http://www.thestar.com/news/gta/article/803161--hume-toronto-the-progressive-not-so-much

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Toronto likes to think of itself not just as progressive, but as one of the most progressive cities in the world, certainly in North America. Is that true? The answer, sad to say, is no. True, we are diverse and politically correct to a fault, but is that the same as being progressive? To be progressive means to be open to change. It implies a willingness to take risks and be bold. On all these counts, Toronto finds itself wanting. Our fear of change has reached the point where the city can tie itself up in knots over the prospect of a few bicycle lanes on Yonge and Jarvis Sts. A proposal to change several one-way streets into two-way thoroughfares sets off talk of a War on Cars.

As obvious as the need to accommodate non-vehicular forms of transportation — even walking — may be, many Torontonians remain adamantly opposed to anything that isn’t the same old, same old. Just last month, the provincial government got away with cutting $4 billion from its belated $11.5 billion commitment to public transit. At city council, some representatives declared themselves relieved at such a turn of events. But then, municipal councillors have built whole careers on pandering to every last NIMBY impulse local residents can muster. Indeed, in some neighbourhoods residents seem convinced they have the right to decide who lives next door.

And speaking of city council, where are the faces of diversity? For a city so fond of passing itself off as the most multicultural on the planet, they are conspicuously absent. In fact, more than ever, recent immigrants to Toronto find themselves consigned to those parts of the post-war suburban city that no one cares about, where services and opportunities are minimal. Even the most highly educated newcomers — doctors, engineers, accountants — are kept out by professional bodies that use credentials to protect their turf at the expense of immigrant practitioners. And as the current election has made painfully clear, there’s no shortage of mayoral wannabes who would have us believe that government is a socialist conspiracy intent on separating us from our hard-earned money.

Just ask the Rob Fords, the Rocco Rossis, those nattering nincompoops of nonsense: Government bad, business good, they bray. Me Tarzan, you Jane. It makes as much sense. Let’s not forget that before them there was Mel Lastman, whose great contribution to Toronto was to leave the budget in tatters and embarrass the city on network television at every chance. Of course, there’s a context for all this, a provincial government terrified of being seen as progressive lest it anger or upset the populace. Premier Dalton McGuinty’s recent change of heart about sex education was an example of his deep-seated fear of leadership.

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Typical Hume. The guy really needs to get out more. The city has already removed dozens of lanes of traffic ... many on commuter routes ... for bike lanes with hardly a peep. Try doing that in just about any other city especially in NA. I also don't see any reason why an educated immigrant from some unaccredited country/college shouldn't be tested to see if they meet our standards of qualifications. It's not as if we let them drive either without testing. And, c'mon, politicians?!? Is that the best you could do?
 
Why is this opinion piece garbage being passed off by the Star as real news?
 
The city has already removed dozens of lanes of traffic ... many on commuter routes ... for bike lanes with hardly a peep. Try doing that in just about any other city especially in NA

That is simply not true. Most US cities have been expanding their bike infrastructure and bike lanes at an astounding clip. My own Sunbelt city has 165 miles of bike lanes (265 km) which is over 100 km more than the City of Toronto, despite the fact that this town has 1/12 the population and is about 1/5 the physical size. Almost all of this was built in the last ten years, one project involved removing two lanes of traffic from the downtown street, and a lot of it is of a quality that you don't ever see in Toronto.

And we think that we aren't growing bike lanes fast enough! We certainly have nothing on role model cities like Davis, CA, Long Beach, CA or Boulder, CO...not to mention heavyweights like New York City which is setting the trend in bicycle infrastructure. In this regard Hume is correct: Toronto is really dragging its feet.
 
I didn't mean to imply cities in North America aren't building kilometres of bike lanes or that Toronto is a leader by any means. Just look at Montreal. However, I have a tough time believing halving the capacity of their version of Eastern and Dundas East wouldn't create as much backlash in most places in NA. Maybe the roadway allowances in the Sunbelt which allow for separate LRT & bike lanes, four lanes of traffic, and generous sidewalks and landscaping are actually their greatest assets with the greatest potential in which case we really are dragging our feet in regards to Eglinton, Lawrence, York Mills, etc. Unfortunately, these stunning rebuilds of their thoroughfares are still lined with surface parking.
 
^Maestro,

This goes directly to what I was getting at in the Russell Smith thread, where I criticized Torontonians for throwing up their hands and finding creative excuses for inaction because Toronto is supposedly so exceptional from all other cities.

Sure, Sunbelt cities have wider roads to begin with, but that doesn't discount what I said about the city I live in narrowing the main downtown strip from 4 traffic lanes to 2 to squeeze in a very generous bike lane on either side. You would have expected howls of resistance from area merchants and from commuters who rely on their cars for more than they do in Toronto, but this was just not the case. And it isn't just Sunbelt cities. New York City, as I mentioned, closed lanes of traffic along busy 8th and 9th Aves. to build bike lanes with a wide berth that are physically separated from traffic.
 
We can't all be as progressive as Arizona.

No offence taken. When a right wing state full of overzealous libertarians can do something like take away road space to build bike lanes and Torontonians proclaim a "war on the car", I believe the joke is on you.
 
Toronto is already progressive, at least by North American standards. We have naturally high transit usage, safe downtown neighbourhoods, population and job growth in the city, and even our suburbs are quite compact. We don't need to be progressive per say, but we do need to do a better job at supporting and sustaining what we've already achieved if we want it to continue.

Therefore, the area in which Toronto needs to be progressive in is building the infrastructure required to support the growing region. It's honestly irrelevant whether a couple extra kilometres of bike lanes are built when at the same time we need new subway lines, more efficient roadways, and when gridlock is rampant.
 
Honestly there's some validity to the article .. but it's not what you think, I think all it goes to show is the perspective media chooses when reporting news. Whenever they publish articles like 'Toronto's peeved at ..." and interview all the furious Torontians, I find they're not at all in the majority. They make for a better 1min clip on the news though and may be the opinion the particular new outlet takes but they're not necessarily what residents in Toronto want ...

Now the one thing I can say about Hume, other then what many of you already have, I hate how he flips flops all over the place with basically every single issue he can bring up. These one off articles about how 'Toronto is backwards" I swear are commissioned from the Star it self if they've been having low sales or something along those lines.
 
No offence taken. When a right wing state full of overzealous libertarians can do something like take away road space to build bike lanes and Torontonians proclaim a "war on the car", I believe the joke is on you.

Make no mistake, I was having a go at Toronto with that comment.
 

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