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Rumble in Rosedale: City, commuters do battle over the fate of one lane
Headshot of John Barber
JOHN BARBER
City hall's much noted but indifferently prosecuted War on the Car is set to resume this spring when downtown progressives move to close the unusual fifth traffic lane in the middle of Jarvis Street, angering commuters from wealthy residential neighbourhoods to the north.
This week, the Federation of North Toronto Ratepayers Associations joined local groups in Rosedale and Moore Park, directly north of the favoured commuter track, in opposing the plan to kill the extra lane. Sensing the growing opposition, north-end Councillors Denzil Minnan-Wong and Karen Stintz are beating the drums at city hall.
Before the expected rhetoric settles, the future of the iconic extra lane on Jarvis Street, which has signals that change the permitted direction of travel according to the needs of rush-hour drivers, will be nothing less than the future of Toronto as we know it.
In the meantime, Councillor Kyle Rae is cringing. As an arch downtowner trying to deliver a genuine improvement to a tired street - trees, bike lanes, widened sidewalks - he is nonetheless directly answerable to the commuters of Rosedale and Moore Park.
The influence of the old "strip wards," a form of electoral reform that united adjoining constituencies of vastly different interests and status, still shows in the configuration of Toronto Centre-Rosedale. As a riding in federal and provincial politics, it is now known simply as Toronto Centre. But at city hall, Rosedale still dares to speak its elitist name - very much so.
"Some people see this as an attack on the car but it's not about that at all," Mr. Rae complained, uncomfortable with the rebellion brewing within his own ward. "It's about improving the public realm, making it work for the neighbourhood and everyone who uses it."
The planned beautification is "more holistic" than a mere traffic plan, according to Mr. Rae. "But somehow - I don't know why - certain car owners think it's about them and their right to drive downtown."
Not so, replied North Rosedale Ratepayers Association president Michael Rodger. "I haven't heard anybody saying they're against the beautification and improvement of Jarvis Street," he said. Rosedale, he added, is sounding the alarm on behalf of all motorists, rich and poor, who are about to encounter a "massive clogging" in the core of the city.
"I don't think Rosedale of all neighbourhoods is going to be as dramatically affected," Mr. Rodger said. The lane closing's prime victims, he added, will be commuters from more distant and less socio-economically distinctive neighbourhoods.
On the face of things, the charge might seem silly. A 2005 traffic study predicted that losing the lane would result only in "modest" delays on Jarvis Street, Church and Sherbourne, measurable in seconds rather than minutes. Despite the narrowing, Jarvis will still carry four lanes of traffic.
But the war drums are beating, and the alliance of car commuters has learned a thing or three over the years. Politely deferring to Mr. Rae's hopes for tatty Jarvis, Mr. Rodger is promoting a compromise. "Why not do a trial closing?" he asked. See how things work out. "Once you make the permanent change it's hard to go back."
But that's where Mr. Rae digs in. A trial will only cause expected traffic problems without demonstrating the virtues of beautification, he said. There will be no compromise.
"It will be two lanes north, two lanes south, bicycle lanes and a widened sidewalk on the east for pedestrians," he declared.
A line in the sand for sure.
Rumble in Rosedale: City, commuters do battle over the fate of one lane
Headshot of John Barber
JOHN BARBER
City hall's much noted but indifferently prosecuted War on the Car is set to resume this spring when downtown progressives move to close the unusual fifth traffic lane in the middle of Jarvis Street, angering commuters from wealthy residential neighbourhoods to the north.
This week, the Federation of North Toronto Ratepayers Associations joined local groups in Rosedale and Moore Park, directly north of the favoured commuter track, in opposing the plan to kill the extra lane. Sensing the growing opposition, north-end Councillors Denzil Minnan-Wong and Karen Stintz are beating the drums at city hall.
Before the expected rhetoric settles, the future of the iconic extra lane on Jarvis Street, which has signals that change the permitted direction of travel according to the needs of rush-hour drivers, will be nothing less than the future of Toronto as we know it.
In the meantime, Councillor Kyle Rae is cringing. As an arch downtowner trying to deliver a genuine improvement to a tired street - trees, bike lanes, widened sidewalks - he is nonetheless directly answerable to the commuters of Rosedale and Moore Park.
The influence of the old "strip wards," a form of electoral reform that united adjoining constituencies of vastly different interests and status, still shows in the configuration of Toronto Centre-Rosedale. As a riding in federal and provincial politics, it is now known simply as Toronto Centre. But at city hall, Rosedale still dares to speak its elitist name - very much so.
"Some people see this as an attack on the car but it's not about that at all," Mr. Rae complained, uncomfortable with the rebellion brewing within his own ward. "It's about improving the public realm, making it work for the neighbourhood and everyone who uses it."
The planned beautification is "more holistic" than a mere traffic plan, according to Mr. Rae. "But somehow - I don't know why - certain car owners think it's about them and their right to drive downtown."
Not so, replied North Rosedale Ratepayers Association president Michael Rodger. "I haven't heard anybody saying they're against the beautification and improvement of Jarvis Street," he said. Rosedale, he added, is sounding the alarm on behalf of all motorists, rich and poor, who are about to encounter a "massive clogging" in the core of the city.
"I don't think Rosedale of all neighbourhoods is going to be as dramatically affected," Mr. Rodger said. The lane closing's prime victims, he added, will be commuters from more distant and less socio-economically distinctive neighbourhoods.
On the face of things, the charge might seem silly. A 2005 traffic study predicted that losing the lane would result only in "modest" delays on Jarvis Street, Church and Sherbourne, measurable in seconds rather than minutes. Despite the narrowing, Jarvis will still carry four lanes of traffic.
But the war drums are beating, and the alliance of car commuters has learned a thing or three over the years. Politely deferring to Mr. Rae's hopes for tatty Jarvis, Mr. Rodger is promoting a compromise. "Why not do a trial closing?" he asked. See how things work out. "Once you make the permanent change it's hard to go back."
But that's where Mr. Rae digs in. A trial will only cause expected traffic problems without demonstrating the virtues of beautification, he said. There will be no compromise.
"It will be two lanes north, two lanes south, bicycle lanes and a widened sidewalk on the east for pedestrians," he declared.
A line in the sand for sure.