Ottawa Citizen

WHERE LRT PLANS STAND AND JUST WHAT LIES AHEAD

Since the NCC’s announceme­nt about the LRT route last week there’s been some calm on the political front. But questions remain about what the city is proposing and what the NCC is demanding. The NCC presentati­on included misleading informatio­n and has con

- Jchianello@ottawaciti­tzen.com mpearson@ottawaciti­zen.com

It’s been a week since the National Capital Commission held a dramatic news conference that some feared might spell the end of the city’s plan for light rail in the west end.

That’s not the case, and this week, both Mayor Jim Watson and Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird — the senior Ottawa MP who oversees the NCC — vowed to dial back the rhetoric, committing to “taking the next 100 days to continue to work constructi­vely.”

But while there’s more calm on the political front, questions remain over exactly what the city is proposing and what the NCC is demanding.

Some confusion can be laid at the feet of the NCC: the board’s request that the city consider a different route was based on a secret analysis by its own staff. The NCC has said it used the city’s data but refused to give the Citizen of copy of that report.

And during its media presentati­on last week, the NCC included images in its slide-show presentati­on that were misleading. The picture of the tunnel supplied by the NCC clearly is unfinished and bears no resemblanc­e to the finished product the city is proposing. Another image of a train running through a field was taken from an older city proposal that is no longer being considered.

Still, it’s hard to keep up with the twists and turns in the western LRT saga. Here’s the latest informatio­n on the city’s plans, what the NCC is worried about and where we go from here.

WHAT IS THIS WESTERN LRT DISPUTE BETWEEN THE NCC AND THE CITY ABOUT?

The dispute centres on where tracks will be laid between Dominion Station and the new Cleary Station. The city’s preferred route is to run trains along 1.2 kilometres of NCC land on the south side of the four-lane Sir John A. Macdonald Parkway (and hundreds of metres from the shore of the Ottawa River). The NCC is not pleased with this idea because it fears for the loss of mature trees, impeded access to the river and restricted views from the shoreline.

That said, the commission is generally supportive of light rail for Ottawa, but it’s this 1.2-km stretch that remains the sticking point.

HOW IS THE CITY ADDRESSING THESE CONCERNS?

The city’s original draft for western LRT plans released in April 2013 showed the train running along the surface of that greenspace, right in front of a number of homes. That just wasn’t OK with the public, who came out in droves to a meeting at city hall (and stayed until midnight). By June, the city had redesigned the controvers­ial 1.2-km segment so that the 700 metres of the track that was near homes would be built in a shallow, buried trench. The city is proposing to plant new greenery over the shallow train tunnel so pedestrian­s would be able to walk across that segment of the greenspace as easily as they can today, says the deputy city manager of planning an infrastruc­ture, Nancy Schepers.

However, there’s still an issue with the 500 metres where the train would run generally at grade along the northern edge of Rochester Field. Schepers confirmed there have been discussion­s between the city and the NCC about extending the shallow tunnel across the entire 1.2 km in question, but there are some challenges with that.

“There’s already physical infrastruc­ture that has to be protected,” Schepers said. “So, within that, we’re trying to find the best grade to go through there.”

WHAT DOES THE NCC WANT CHANGED?

Given its desire to protect the existing greenspace along the parkway, the NCC last week asked the city to include the Rochester Field-Richmond Road alignment in its ongoing environmen­tal assessment for the constructi­on of the western light-rail corridor or else consider a “completely buried” tunnel under the parkway in order to “protect this important national asset.”

In other words, the NCC did not completely slam the door on the city’s preferred route along the Ottawa River — but the commission is clearly not convinced of the city’s plan.

WHY DOES THE NCC SAY ROCHESTER FIELD IS A BETTER OPTION?

Using Rochester Field would retain the parkway landscape character as is, reduce the amount of NCC-owned land affected by light rail and expansion, and bring trains closer to the communitie­s it’s designed to serve, NCC officials said.

“It would offer potential for more effective transit service coverage, support city building, can contribute to increased ridership, and has greater potential for transit-oriented developmen­t,” said Arto Keklikian, the NCC’s chief transporta­tion planner, at last week’s news conference.

But this is a red herring. Because there are no stations between Dominion and Cleary — the proposed stations on either side of the Richmond Undergroun­d — the route between them matters little in terms of the public’s access to the train. In which case, the city says, running trains south of the parkway makes more sense than through a built-up part of the city.

WHERE DOES THE NCC SAY THE TRAIN SHOULD GO AFTER LEAVING ROCHESTER FIELD?

The board appears to be agnostic on this question. “The NCC is not taking a position on what happens after it gets off the Parkway corridor,” said Steve Willis, the executive director of the NCC’s capital planning branch.

“That’s a technical issue the city should study, and the board has not taken a position on whether it stays at surface, goes down, where it goes down. We’re asking the city to go back and study this feasibilit­y,” he said last week.

The NCC says the Rochester Field option would be comparable to the city’s price tag of $980 million for western LRT, but that’s only if the train is run at surface through Westboro, which the city has rejected because it’s unpalatabl­e to the community.

WHO SITS ON THE NCC’S BOARD OF DIRECTORS?

The board is supposed to have 15 members, including the chairman and CEO. Thirteen members are to come from across Canada, including five from the National Capital Region. There is currently one vacancy on the board, and another member, François Paulhus, temporaril­y stepped down more than a year ago after a witness testifying before the Charbonnea­u Commission investigat­ing corruption in Quebec’s constructi­on industry named him as part of a price-fixing scheme in Gatineau (Paulhus has not been charged with anything). Of those remaining, six are from Ottawa — Jacquelin Holzman, Michael Poliwoda, Kay Stanley and Bob Plamondon, as well as chairman Russ Mills and CEO Mark Kristmanso­n. A seventh is from the Outaouais. The remaining six come from Cornwall, Toronto, Fredericto­n, Quebec City, Edmonton and Vancouver.

THE CITY WAS SENT A COPY OF THE NCC REPORT. WHAT DID OFFICIALS THINK OF IT?

“It’s premature,” Schepers said, “and certainly, in my mind, there wasn’t anything there that I would have comfort going back to council and saying, ‘We need to reopen this.’ I think they prematurel­y came to a conclusion without the benefit of all of the work that we are doing and plan to continue to do with them.”

BAIRD AND WATSON AGREED TO WORK TOWARD A SOLUTION OVER THE NEXT 100 DAYS. WHAT DOES THAT MEAN?

High-ranking officials from both the city and the NCC will meet next week to develop a plan. From the city’s perspectiv­e, the goal is to alleviate some of the NCC board’s concerns about the Richmond Undergroun­d.

“The fact that they have a report suggests that they are not yet satisfied and we need to do some more work, and that’s fair,” Schepers said.

 ??  ?? City of Ottawa’s artist rendering of what the berm would look like for the western section of the LRT. The city proposes that greenery over the train tunnel would accommodat­e pedestrian­s.
City of Ottawa’s artist rendering of what the berm would look like for the western section of the LRT. The city proposes that greenery over the train tunnel would accommodat­e pedestrian­s.

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