Toronto Star

DEPARTURE TIME

Metrolinx CEO Bruce McCuaig is stepping down, but remains optimistic about the agency’s future,

- BEN SPURR TRANSPORTA­TION REPORTER

For a man who has spent nearly seven years atop the fractious world of Toronto-area transit planning, Bruce McCuaig is remarkably unfazed by the criticism and controvers­y that accompany his line of work.

Metrolinx announced last week that McCuaig was stepping down as its president and CEO, unexpected­ly calling time on the congenial 56year-old’s six-and-a-half year tenure in charge of the agency responsibl­e for transit planning in the Greater Toronto and Hamilton Area.

He was appointed to the job in 2010, and his time at Metrolinx hasn’t been without wrinkles. But in an interview on his third-floor office at the agency’s Union Station headquarte­rs, it was clear that McCuaig sees those problems as mere detours on the route to better transit for the GTHA.

“When I look back on the past six years, I think of it as a period of progress. A lot of foundation­s being laid for the kind of service that we need in this region,” he said.

Accomplish­ments McCuaig cites include completing tunnelling work for the $5.3-billion Eglinton Crosstown LRT, implementi­ng Presto on the TTC, launching the Union Pearson Express and expanding the Georgetown rail corridor to vastly increase GO Transit service (GO is a division of Metrolinx). Under his watch, Metrolinx has also advanced planning for regional express rail, a massive $13.5-billion expansion of GO service that will provide the region with more frequent, electrifie­d service.

McCuaig, who lives in Port Credit and commutes by GO every day, professes to have few regrets. But he does concede that occasional­ly Metrolinx has stumbled. He acknowledg­es that the agency got the fare structure for the Union Pearson Express wrong. When it launched in 2015, few people were willing to pay the initial $27.50 that the service charged to take riders between the airport and Union Station. After nine months of running mostly empty trains, Metrolinx was forced to slash prices. Ridership spiked, but for months the train, which was supposed to break even, was so underused it cost taxpayers $52 per rider.

Yet McCuaig maintains that Metrolinx got most of the important things right, because it finished the $456-million project on budget and in time for the 2015 Pan Am Games, as planned.

“The one thing that didn’t work, right from the beginning . . . was the fare structure. But it’s also the one thing that we could change,” he said.

He takes a similar view of the Presto system, which has been relatively trouble free on most of the GTHA’s transit systems but has been dogged by technical problems since being deployed on the TTC.

He said the particular­ities of installing Presto at subway stations and on old streetcars that were never meant to carry the technology meant there would always be growing pains, and that they will be rectified.

“I know some people will say, it’s been done elsewhere, why can’t it be just done here? And that’s absolutely true. Except that every ‘here’ is slightly different than the other ‘heres,’ ” he said, adding that he’s confident Presto will achieve its goal of 99 per cent reliabilit­y this year.

A career public servant, McCuaig, who last year had a salary of $367,197.85, is leaving Metrolinx to take a job in the federal government as an executive adviser at the new Canada Infrastruc­ture Bank.

He said he wanted “a chance to shape something right from the beginning.”

His departure comes at a time of some uncertaint­y. Metrolinx is locked in a legal battle with Bombardier over a $770-million light rail vehicle order that the company allegedly botched. Depending on the outcome of the case, the Crosstown project could be headed for significan­t and costly delays. If he was nervous about the decision, McCuaig didn’t let on.

He is similarly optimistic about the future of Metrolinx. The agency was legislated into existence in 2006 by the provincial Liberals, and has never operated with another party in power. The Liberals are polling dismally ahead of the June 2018 election, and historical­ly, the Ontario PCs don’t share the Grits’ zeal for massive public transit investment.

But McCuaig said no matter who forms the next government, with the population of the GTHA expanding and municipal boundaries becoming less relevant, there will always be a need for an organizati­on such as Metrolinx to co-ordinate the region’s transit.

“The importance of transporta­tion and transit infrastruc­ture in this city and this region is not going away.”

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 ?? VINCE TALOTTA/TORONTO STAR ?? CEO Bruce McCuaig is leaving to join the Canada Infrastruc­ture Bank.
VINCE TALOTTA/TORONTO STAR CEO Bruce McCuaig is leaving to join the Canada Infrastruc­ture Bank.

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