Toronto Star

Key planners discuss Pearson airport transit hub

Three levels of government meet with stakeholde­rs on ‘Union Station West’ plan

- BRUCE CAMPION-SMITH OTTAWA BUREAU CHIEF

OTTAWA— A proposal for a multibilli­on dollar transit hub at Pearson Internatio­nal Airport is getting serious considerat­ion by the federal and provincial government­s, the Star has learned.

A high-level meeting involving stakeholde­rs from all three levels of government was held at Queen’s Park Tuesday to provide an update on the proposal and map out next steps.

That meeting — which also involved the operators of Pearson airport and Metrolinx, the regional transit agency — brought together both transporta­tion planners as well as the infrastruc­ture officials who can provide the public funding need- ed to make the project a reality.

“There’s definitely serious interest,” said one source who spoke on background because of the sensitivit­y of the discussion­s.

The Greater Toronto Airports Authority (GTAA) has pitched its proposal for a transit hub as part of its strategy to help fuel further passenger growth at Pearson.

That transit centre, located on airport lands, would be served by the Eglinton Crosstown LRT, Finch West LRT, Mississaug­a Bus Rapid Transit, GO Transit rail lines, UP Airport Express and perhaps even high speed rail in the future.

The hub has been dubbed “Union Station West.”

The afternoon meeting, held in a boardroom in an Ontario government building adjacent to Queen’s Park, was organized by the federal government.

The goal of the meeting was to hear updates related to the regional tran- sit centre.

Listed as outcomes were the “identifica­tion of next steps, to advance studies and discussion­s on potential working groups to facilitate integrated planning.”

Those invited to the meeting included the deputy minister of Transport Canada and three other senior department officials from Infrastruc­ture Canada, the finance department and the Canadian Infrastruc­ture Bank Transition office.

The province was represente­d by officials from the Ministry of Transporta­tion and Infrastruc­ture Ontario. Officials from the cities of Toronto, Mississaug­a and Brampton were also present.

Gianni Ciufo, who heads Deloitte’s public private partnershi­p team, provided an overview of transit funding and financing options.

The heavyweigh­t presence at the meeting is a signal that it’s getting serious attention, the source said.

Metrolinx — represente­d at the session by Phil Verster, its new chief executive officer, and senior planning staff — has made improved transit to Pearson one of its priorities.

The agency’s draft regional transporta­tion plan notes that the airport area has the second-highest concentrat­ion of jobs in the Greater Toronto Area and says cutting down on auto use will require “more attractive and integrated transit services.”

The draft document says that support for Pearson’s regional transporta­tion centre should be a priority to improve transit access to the airport and better enable the airport region to support economic growth. The GTAA declined to comment on Tuesday’s meeting.

But it has been an advocate of its plan, presenting it to political decision-makers.

It has issued a request for proposals for the design and phasing of the transit centre.

According to the authority’s website, more than 44 million people travelled through Pearson airport in 2016.

A report for the airports authority in 2016 described the need for a transit hub as “urgent,” but said it would be “potentiall­y one of the most effective, efficient and productive of transit investment­s in the region.”

Both the federal and provincial government­s are said to be interested in the proposal because of the opportunit­ies to improve access to Pearson — Canada’s busiest airport — and improve access to transit to reduce congestion in the airport region.

One next step will be to set in motion planning for the multiple transit lines planned to serve the centre — and how they would be funded.

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