Toronto Star

Big Bend promoted for subway

Longer path would be less disruptive, say backers — but critics just see another delay

- BEN SPURR TRANSPORTA­TION REPORTER

Having won the lengthy political battle over the controvers­ial Scarboroug­h subway extension, some proponents of the transit project now want to change its route.

Coun. Glenn De Baeremaeke­r and Liberal MPP Brad Duguid are asking city planners to study an alternate alignment for the extension. They argue the new route, which has the backing of a local community group, could reduce traffic disruption­s and eliminate the need to expropriat­e property to build the subway.

Critics say that the new subway path, which would be roughly 280 metres longer than the alignment preferred by city planning staff, would be more expensive, may not be feasible, and studying it could delay the subway project. But De Baeremaeke­r described it as a “viable, reasonable option.”

“It’s called the magic of public input, of actually asking people who live in a community what they think of large-scale projects in their community,” said De Baeremaeke­r (Ward 38, Scarboroug­h Centre), one of council’s most vocal supporters of the subway extension.

He said residents who support the plan “are people who actually know the area better than the engineers who are drawing on a computer from A to B.”

Like the route preferred by city staff, the new alignment — dubbed “the Big Bend” — would run under McCowan Rd. But instead of heading north to the Scarboroug­h Town Centre, it would veer east just south of Ellesmere Rd., and then curve west under Triton Ave. and terminate under a field east of Brimley Rd., which would be used as a launch site for the undergroun­d shaft.

The plan was not contemplat­ed in the Scarboroug­h subway business case authored by city staff that went before council in July, or in the materials presented at weeks of public consultati­ons earlier this year.

Instead, the Big Bend is the brainchild of Lorne Ross, the former planning commission­er for Scarboroug­h, who works with the Glen Andrew Community Associatio­n.

In a news release issued last week, the community associatio­n warned that the existing subway constructi­on plan would require the city to set up an “open pit mining operation right in our neighbourh­ood” for up to six years.

The TTC has warned that the Scarboroug­h extension, which current estimates say will cost $3.2 billion, is already at risk for being delayed and going over budget. De Baeremaeke­r said he wasn’t worried that studying the Big Bend would add further delays because staff are still finalizing potential alignments.

Council, which backed the subway extension in a 27-16 vote in July, is expected to pick a final route at its meeting in December.

Bruce Hawkins, a spokespers­on for the city’s planning department, confirmed in an email that staff have been asked to review the Big Bend alignment and could include it in the December report. Asked who directed staff to study it, Hawkins replied: “The alternativ­e was submitted by the Glen Andrew Community Associatio­n.”

Councillor Josh Matlow said the fact that a new route is being considered at this stage “is just more evidence that our city’s transit planning process is highly politicize­d.”

Matlow (Ward 22, St. Paul’s) has been a fierce critic of the subway plan, favouring instead a seven-stop LRT that would have been funded by the province. He predicted that studying the new alignment could further delay expanding rapid transit in Scarboroug­h.

“It would be very sad if some of the same people who said so often that they just want to build something, anything, and get it built now, regardless of the facts or the costs, could now possibly be responsibl­e for yet another delay,” he said.

Transit expert Steve Munro said the Big Bend might have some benefits, but he questioned whether details of the proposal were workable and said it should have been considered earlier. “The entire line’s design would have to be reviewed. This represents a considerab­le delay.”

Duguid, who represents Scarboroug­h Centre, said that he wanted more informatio­n, but on the face of it the Big Bend has merit. “This is not something that was just drawn on the back of a napkin,” he said.

He said he raised the plan with Mayor John Tory earlier this week and Tory was open to reviewing it.

Tory said Thursday he wasn’t familiar with the details of the proposed alignment, but that he would be willing to have staff review the idea if it could improve on existing plans. With files from Jennifer Pagliaro

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