W. K. Lis
Superstar
Save Our Transit from the anti-transit, automobile-addicted, streetcar-phobia influences of Rob Ford and his loyal underlings.
From the Globe and Mail, at this link:
From The Star, at this link:
Councillor David Shiner comment that “It is time to stop thinking the only part of the city that deserves good rapid transit is the downtown,†is very wrong. 1978 was the date year that ANY underground electric railway line construction occurred within the boundaries of the of city of Toronto. Since 1978, all subway construction occurred, is presently occurring, in the "suburbs" (including now Vaughan). Only with the Eglinton Crosstown construction will there be construction for an underground electric railway line.
There has been streetcar right-of-way construction, but not rapid light rail transit construction until now.
From the Globe and Mail, at this link:
Doug Ford hatches public campaign to save mayor’s subway plan
Elizabeth Church
Globe and Mail Update
Published Monday, Feb. 13, 2012 7:41PM EST
Councillor Doug Ford wants to rally the people of Toronto to save the mayor’s subway plans.
The Save our Subways campaign, or S.O.S. as he is calling it, is still in its infancy, but the Etobicoke councillor is predicting it will sway the McGuinty government to see things the mayor’s way – just as the voters of Oakville managed to halt construction on a power plant near their homes in the runup to this fall’s provincial election.
“McGuinty folded on that power plant there. Is he going to fold here?†Councillor Ford asked. “The mayor respects the will of council and always has. The council is not respecting the will of the people.
The plans for the public campaign come less than a week after Toronto’s subway-loving mayor suffered a stunning defeat of his transit plans at the hands of city councillors. Last week at a special transit meeting, a majority of councillors led by TTC chair Karen Stintz endorsed a plan that included street-level light rail on Eglinton Avenue east of the Don Valley and Finch Avenue West. It also created a expert panel to study the mayor’s campaign pledge for a subway expansion on Sheppard, with a report due next month.
The move runs counter to a deal signed last year by Premier Dalton McGuinty and the mayor to use $8.4-billion in provincial transit funding to bury the entire Eglinton Crosstown line, an agreement that failed to get the required support of council.
While the city waits for the next move from the province, Councillor Ford said it is time for the public to get involved. “We are going to have to start some organization like the lefties do,†he said, vowing to use e-mail, automated calls and “10 little Mrs. Jones,†making calls to drum up support.
The mayor’s office, he said, has received more calls supporting subways than any other issue and the polls show subways are what the public wants. Councillor Ford hopes to open an S.O.S. office on Eglinton Avenue East for starters and then move the focus to Sheppard and eventually Finch.
Political foes of the Ford administration may think they have scored a win, but Councillor Ford, his brother’s campaign manager during his campaign for mayor, said they are paving the way for more years for the mayor.
“You can’t win the city unless you win Scarborough and Etobicoke,†he said. After the council defeat, the councillor said, he was “high-fiving†his brother. “I told him, this is positive. This is a clear agenda. You’ve got it. It’s done.â€
Councillor Adam Vaughan, a critic of Mayor Ford said, all the slogans in the world won’t address the $1-billion funding gap that exists for extending the Sheppard line.
“There are a billion reasons why we can’t give you a subway,†Mr. Vaughan said he would tell Scarborough residents. “It’s $1-billion in new taxes and $1-billion in new development charges that come from massive condominiums that sprout out everywhere.â€
Mr. Vaughan said attempts to drum up support for subway projects – such as the mayor’s weekly community walks – will not change the transit plan endorsed by council that delivers transit to more residents in the east end. “They can walk around malls until they are blue in the face, council has made a decision,†he said. “There are folks all over Scarborough who are celebrating.â€
From The Star, at this link:
Mayor Ford’s executive pushes ahead with subway expansion dream
David Rider Urban Affairs Bureau Chief
Mayor Rob Ford’s executive committee has voted to push ahead with plans for a Sheppard subway extension.
Monday’s vote came five days after a specially called meeting at which city council largely derailed Ford’s subway vision with a 25-18 endorsement of a return to a light rail plan.
While explicitly confirming support for a partially buried LRT on Eglinton Ave. and a surface line on Finch Ave., council stopped short of completely dashing Ford’s multi-billion-dollar dream of extending the Sheppard subway to Scarborough Town Centre primarily through private investment.
It authorized creation of an expert panel, including former mayor David Crombie, Ford’s point man on Sheppard subway financing Gordon Chong, and U of T transit expert Eric Miller, to report back on Sheppard options by March 21. They meet for the first time Friday.
Ford has dismissed council’s vote as “irrelevant†and is lobbying the public and the province to ignore it and proceed with his plan for a buried Eglinton LRT and a Sheppard subway.
Members of executive, after hearing Chong’s defence of his report advocating subways, and listening to visiting councillors attack him for relying heavily on a 20-year-old environmental assessment, sided firmly with Ford and subways.
“It is time to stop thinking the only part of the city that deserves good rapid transit is the downtown,†said Councillor David Shiner (Ward 24 Willowdale).
Norm Kelly (Ward 40 Scarborough Agincourt) said council is thinking small by only considering what it can finance from the province’s promised $8.4 billion.
“What we need in this debate is what Steve Jobs brought to Apple,†Kelly said.
Ford’s allies approved his motion to have city manager Joe Pennachetti report back with “recommendations on a process to move forward with the development of a plan to complete the Sheppard subway.â€
Pennachetti is also tasked by council with reporting back on the findings of the expert panel, which includes LRT advocates.
Councillor Doug Ford told reporters that the public pressure campaign he and Mayor Rob Ford are launching will be called Save our Subways, or S.O.S. As well as personal appearances, they hope to open an office and use mass emails and phone calls to lobby the public and pressure councillors who voted against the mayor’s subway plan and Premier Dalton McGuinty, who controls $8.4 billion in promised transit funding.
Council Adam Vaughan (Ward 20 Trinity-Spadina) called Chong’s report fatally flawed, saying it relies on 20-year-old projections, most of which were proven wrong in a 2011 review by the TTC.
Executive also approved Councillor Michelle Berardinetti’s motion asking staff for a report on using incentives to entice retailers to donate proceeds from the five-cent mandatory plastic bag fee to the city’s fight against the emerald ash borer bug thinning Toronto’s tree canopy. The committee rejected Councillor Paul Ainslie’s motion to look at ways to scrap the bag fee altogether.
Councillor David Shiner comment that “It is time to stop thinking the only part of the city that deserves good rapid transit is the downtown,†is very wrong. 1978 was the date year that ANY underground electric railway line construction occurred within the boundaries of the of city of Toronto. Since 1978, all subway construction occurred, is presently occurring, in the "suburbs" (including now Vaughan). Only with the Eglinton Crosstown construction will there be construction for an underground electric railway line.
There has been streetcar right-of-way construction, but not rapid light rail transit construction until now.