Joe Cressy's excuse for closing King St for TIFF when I emailed him:
Thank you for taking the time to write about TIFF and the King Street Pilot.
Councillor Cressy has been a strong advocate for the King Street Pilot, which runs through Ward 20, and has been working hard since the Pilot was approved and implemented to ensure that it is a clear and comprehensive success. He believes that planning in advance to close King Street to all traffic during the busiest first few days of TIFF is the best possible option for transit riders.
The major film premieres hosted by the Princess of Wales Theatre on the first two days of TIFF -- Thursday and Friday -- are always accompanied by widely known celebrities, who in turn attract thousands of people who want to catch a glimpse, or get an autograph or selfie with the celebrities. Without careful management, the crowding situation can become dangerous. In past years we have tried, together, to maintain regular streetcar service on King Street during TIFF. Due to the dangerous crowding situation, Toronto Police have had to make the last-minute decision to close King Street to all vehicles including streetcars during the afternoon peak period on Thursday and Friday. The decision is made at the discretion of the officers working in the area at any given time. This does not serve transit users well because it is difficult to communicate and it can take hours for regular service to recover, with additional negative effects on nearby routes due to the unplanned congestion on the street network.
Instead, by anticipating the closure of King Street to vehicles and starting planning for this scenario early in the year, we are able to ensure that it is widely and clearly communicated in advance. This helps transit riders to plan for the route diversion, and it helps to reduce the volume of private motor vehicles in the area so there is less congestion affecting all downtown transit routes. And it means we can take appropriate measures to support the temporary diversion, including parking restrictions on Queen Street and stationing police officers at intersections where streetcars must make turns. Each year we meet with the TTC, TIFF, Toronto Police, and Transportation Services to start working out the details for the temporary closure well in advance of the festival.
TIFF is an asset to Toronto and we are happy that they are part of the local community in the Entertainment District, with their year-round home on King Street at the Lightbox. Since major gala screenings during the festival in the fall are hosted by the Princess of Wales Theatre on King Street and Roy Thomson Hall nearby, it is unavoidable that King Street is the major hub of activity during festival season. We have to be proactive and make realistic plans to maintain transit service around all that activity. Ultimately, planning in advance to temporarily close King Street is better for transit riders than leaving it to the last minute when crowding becomes dangerous.