It will most likely be protected regardless of any decision that gets made. The Ministry of Energy is planning to colocate a future transmission corridor within the GTA West ROW, so there is additional governmental interest in protecting this area for future infrastructure.At the very least the ROW should be protected.
I really hope this gets built, because if it doesn't then caledon will choke on truck trailer exhaust fumes.Apparently the federal gov will make a decision on doing their own EA by May 4th:
Ottawa’s decision on controlling the fate of GTA West Highway will come by May 4th
It means environmental activists will soon have a clearer view on the future of the controversial 400-series highway.thepointer.com
At the very least the ROW should be protected.
Electric or not, the number of trucks on area roads is going up, and as industrial land becomes scarcer and more expensive in the 416 and immediately surrounding areas the number of warehouses/work yards/manufacturing etc. in areas like those just beyond where this highway is to go is going to increase greatly (for example, look at where Amazon has built and is building GTA distribution centres lately). These trucks are all going to be on municipal roads in that region without the highway. Congestion will increase. Costs will increase due to transit times for basically everything. This stuff cascades.We're not that far away from fully electric vehicle fleets (10-20 year horizons). That's within the horizon of building this highway (5-10 years).
I would atleast prefer they make it wide enough for four lanes only. I don't want a six lane highway in Caledon, no thanks.I'd be fine w/preserving a narrower ROW for hydro and/or rail.
But not a 400-series highway width one.
A perfect example is the 115/35.I would atleast prefer they make it wide enough for four lanes only. I don't want a six lane highway in Caledon, no thanks.