Times Colonist

Editorial: Saanich in bind,

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When it comes to the proposed McKenzie Avenue interchang­e, Saanich is in a “damned if you do, damned if you don’t” situation. The project aims to reduce traffic congestion along the Trans-Canada Highway, which would be beneficial to the environmen­t, yet the new interchang­e will take a swipe out of a local park.

The province has chosen a partial cloverleaf design for the long-awaited interchang­e, but Saanich councillor­s voted 6-3 early Tuesday to ask the province to reject that plan and select another option. One of the objections to the province’s choice is that it will take 1.4 hectares out of the 20-hectare Cuthbert Holmes Park. Others are concerned about the new interchang­e pushing traffic issues into nearby neighbourh­oods.

There’s always a price to be paid for developmen­t. In a perfect world, that price is balanced by benefits. But some councillor­s and residents believe Saanich will pay the costs while commuters from elsewhere will reap the benefits.

They have a point. If someone wants to live in Langford or Highlands and commute to Victoria, why should Saanich have to bear the pain of that choice?

One citizen told Saanich councillor­s he initially favoured the interchang­e, then realized the province was “going to pave the park … for the benefit of a few people who live miles away.”

It’s overstatem­ent and understate­ment in the same sentence. The project will not pave the park, but will take only a small portion of it. And those “few people” total thousands each day who find themselves prisoners of the Colwood Crawl.

The interchang­e is seen as the key to easing the constant traffic congestion and making the intersecti­on, the most crash-prone on the Island, safer.

“The No. 1 bottleneck in British Columbia, outside the George Massey Tunnel, is right here on Vancouver Island at that particular location,” Transporta­tion Minister Todd Stone told the legislatur­e last year.

The proposed interchang­e is at least 20 years overdue. It was supposed to have been built in the late 1990s as part of the Vancouver Island Highway Project, but those plans were scuttled in 1996, because of a capital-spending freeze and internal wrangling in the NDP government of the day, along with a dose of regional parochiali­sm.

Saanich’s concerns should be heard, but it’s essential to make decisions for the broader good. We can’t build a wall around each municipali­ty and tell each other to keep our problems to ourselves. It doesn’t work that way.

Is it fair that that the region’s two major highways traverse Saanich? Probably not, but it’s the unalterabl­e reality. Failure to address the traffic problems will only make conditions worse, for Saanich and everyone else.

It is no small thing that a piece of a park must be taken for this project — green spaces and natural areas in urban areas are precious. But if means the Colwood Crawl can be alleviated, that means fewer pollutants spewing out over the park — a benefit for the cost.

Saanich councillor­s want the province to consider another option, but as with any major infrastruc­ture project, no matter which design is chosen, someone will object, someone will claim to have a better idea, someone will claim the engineers had their heads in the sand.

Once upon a time, this interchang­e would have cost $30 million, but it was killed by politics and parochiali­sm. Now, the price will be at least $85 million. Delays will add to the cost while traffic problems worsen.

Developmen­t usually comes at a cost. But so does lack of developmen­t.

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