Pandemic changing ways we get around
Getting around Stanley Park since the pandemic struck is a new experience for Tom Green.
Roads that weave through the urban forest in Vancouver have been closed to traffic, making space for residents to get fresh air at a physical distance.
“It’s become a cycling and walking paradise and you can hear the birds better,” said the climate solutions policy analyst for the David Suzuki Foundation.
Mobility data released by Apple suggests enormous declines in personal transportation since COVID-19 began its spread in Canada.
Users of the company’s Maps app made 80 per cent fewer requests for directions on transit between Jan. 13 and May 4 across the country. Requests from drivers dropped 42 per cent, while walkers dropped 40 per cent during the same period.
It’s a shift that one expert says places communities at a crossroads. There’s an opportunity to encourage healthier forms of transportation after the crisis subsides but there’s also a lot at stake, said Meghan Winters, an associate professor of health sciences at Simon Fraser University.
“I think the biggest challenge that our cities will face is that we’re not going to recover in terms of transit,” Winters said.
Data from post-lockdown China suggests more people are driving, she said.
In Canada, already cashstrapped transit agencies are facing sharp revenue declines and a new public aversion to shared spaces that could extend into the long-term.
In Metro Vancouver, TransLink says it’s losing around $75 million each month due to reductions in ridership and lost fuel-tax revenue. The Toronto Transit Commission has temporarily laid off 1,200 employees amid an 85 per cent drop in ridership.
Service cuts are manageable in neighbourhoods where alternate routes are available but there’s a question about equity if some routes are permanently cut. Not everyone can drive and people with disabilities, teens and seniors could lose vital links to groceries and medical appointments, Winters said.
Cities aren’t designed to handle significant increases in congestion unless a large portion of the economy shifts to more permanent workfrom-home arrangements, she said.
But there’s also an opportunity as more people bike and walk on roads without traffic in many places. People who don’t normally cycle have been able to try it out in a safer way and could continue riding under the right conditions, she said.
“If there’s one silver lining here, it’s that we’ve been in a place that isn’t as car-centric, that doesn’t have that same congestion, pollution, noise, stressors. And people have been out in their communities noticing different things, hearing different things, feeling safer on their streets,” Winters said.
But it will take a co-ordinated effort for cities to hold onto that change, she said.
“They’ll have to invest in ensuring that walking and cycling continue to feel like safe activities for people,” she said.
In the short-term, police in several jurisdictions said they’ve seen a large drop in road accidents during the pandemic, but also more dangerous driving on the open roads.