Montreal Gazette

Green light given for five stations

Couillard and Trudeau put $365 million into planning for extension to Anjou

- RENÉ BRUEMMER rbruemmer@postmedia.com twitter.com/renebruemm­er

After 40 years of empty promises, Premier Philippe Couillard and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau came to St-Léonard Monday to announce the Montreal métro’s Blue Line will be extended eastward for five stops, to be opened in 2026.

Couillard stressed that this pledge could be trusted because it comes with a significan­t amount of cash attached: $365 million, going mainly to the cost of expropriat­ing houses, buildings and land to construct métro stations and bus terminals, and funding for a business and technical plan that will allow the Société de transport de Montréal to put out calls for tenders for constructi­on work slated to begin in 2020.

“Unlike previous times the extension was announced, we have already put money aside and sent notices of expropriat­ion to many homeowners and landowners,” Couillard said. “That is not the kind of thing you just undo.”

Couillard added that it was the first time an announceme­nt was made with Canada’s prime minister present, providing more reason to believe.

The total cost of the extension is estimated at $3.9 billion, but Couillard cautioned that was still preliminar­y and could change. He countered the assertions of former city councillor Richard Bergeron, who published a letter in Le Devoir saying the cost estimates were wildly overpriced, in comparison with costs of building métro stations in Laval. Costs for expropriat­ion and purchasing land are far lower in Laval, Couillard said.

The line will be extended for five stops along Jean-Talon St., just south of the Metropolit­an Expressway, with stations at the intersecti­ons of Pie-IX Blvd., Viau Blvd., Lacordaire Blvd., Langelier Blvd. and at the Galeries D’Anjou shopping mall next to Highway 25. There are also plans to create a pedestrian tunnel to link the métro line to the Pie-IX bus rapid transit line, which is still under constructi­on. Two bus terminals and a parking lot for 1,200 cars are also envisioned. The government predicts the extension will draw 17,100 new users and result in 5,300 fewer cars on the road.

Trudeau called the announceme­nt long overdue for the region.

“It’s been years that the eastern portion of the city has been underserve­d in terms of existing public transit, especially considerin­g that more and more people are choosing to live here,” he said.

It takes roughly 45 minutes to more than an hour for residents to get downtown from St-Léonard, said Pierre Frisko, general manager of the Jean Talon East business developmen­t corporatio­n, with the result that the borough has the highest percentage of car owners on the island, he said. The lack of efficient public transit discourage­s industries because they fear they won’t be able to attract workers. It’s also a burden for residents who work in the western area of.

“Finally — that is what I want to say. Finally,” said St-Léonard city councillor Dominic Perri. “I’ve been hearing about this since I first ran for office here in 1982. Thirtysix years.”

Perri was there when former premier Jean Charest announced in 2009 that the Blue Line would be extended. Four years later, the Parti Québécois repeated the pledge, saying they were putting $30 million toward analysis. Both promises resulted in numerous studies but no stations.

This is the first time a significan­t amount of money is being put forward, Perri said, and expropriat­ion notices have been sent out, so he feels confident it will happen.

Montreal Mayor Valérie Plante welcomed the news as well. But she noted that the extension will put more pressure on the already overcrowde­d Orange Line, so her administra­tion would be continuing to push for a new Pink Line that would run from north to south.

Asked how the stations should be named, Plante said she was open to honouring prominent individual­s from Montreal’s history, particular­ly women and people of diverse background­s who have been missing from street names and parks, but said the decision would be made with all involved parties and in keeping with the métro’s practices.

Quebec and Ottawa are still negotiatin­g how the bill will be split, as the federal government begins Phase 2 of its infrastruc­ture program outlining how much it will give to the provinces and territorie­s. But the leaders said Monday the figures shouldn’t stray too far from the 60-40 federal-provincial split the two sides had negotiated during Phase 1 of the program.

The Parti Québécois panned the announceme­nt as more window dressing and no action.

“After four years of waiting, the citizens of Montreal East will stay hungry,” said Carole Poirier, opposition critic for the metropolis.

“While Montrealer­s were waiting for an announceme­nt of an earth-turning to officially start the constructi­on, the government instead informs us that it is engaging in even more preliminar­y studies.”

Couillard said he preferred to be realistic than overly optimistic in his timelines, and said the studies were important because the majority of cost overruns in any project occur because of inadequate planning at the outset.

Unlike previous times the extension was announced, we have already put money aside and sent notices ...

 ?? PAUL CHIASSON/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, flanked by Montreal Mayor Valérie Plante and Quebec Premier Philippe Couillard, responds to a question during the announceme­nt of the extension of the métro’s Blue Line on Monday in Montreal.
PAUL CHIASSON/THE CANADIAN PRESS Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, flanked by Montreal Mayor Valérie Plante and Quebec Premier Philippe Couillard, responds to a question during the announceme­nt of the extension of the métro’s Blue Line on Monday in Montreal.

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