Snowplows or no plows? In Toronto, it depends where you live
Pre-amalgamation divide makes some sidewalks unsafe, critics say
In the heart of winter, Gina Stoneham’s sidewalk does not get plowed by the city.
Less than a five-minute walk away, Abigail Manzano’s does.
Both women live on Pritchard Ave., a quiet, mostly residential stretch of west Toronto’s Rockcliffe-Smythe neighbourhood, bisected by Jane St.
But when it comes to snow and ice, theirs is a tale of two sidewalks. Only the eastern stretch of Pritchard, where Manzano lives, makes the cut for city sidewalk snow clearing.
Manzano says the city usually shows up to clear the sidewalk in front of her home “within 24 hours.”
Meanwhile, Stoneham finds, thewestern part often turns into a treacherous icy pass.
“I am so paranoid that my husband bought me a pair of boots last year for Christmas that, with a special key, flip out these spikes,” says the 64-yearold. “Those things saved my life a few times.”
The neighbourhood’s winter partition hints at a deeper divide in the city.
Across Toronto, the city plows the majority of sidewalks, especially major routes. But in a vast and complicated Toronto “no plow zone” — which includes stretches of sidewalks in the old cities of Toronto, York and East York — residents are responsible for clearing the sidewalk in front of their own properties.
The city says it’s because those sidewalks don’t meet criteria for clearing — that they’re too narrow, or there are other obstacles such as utility poles. Critics says it’s the continuing legacy of a pre-amalgamation inequity.
The no-plow areas are an issue pedestrian and seniors advocates say puts people of all ages at risk.
A Star analysis of 2018 snowand ice-related calls to 311, the city’s non-emergency hotline, broken down by the first three postal code digits, found the most calls (165) came from the west Toronto area that includes Rockcliffe-Smythe. Those statistics cover complaints in 19 categories, including general snow removal, icy sidewalks, road plowing and sidewalk snow clearing.
Nestled between Weston Rd. and Lambton Woods, just north of the Junction and south of Mount Dennis, Rockcliffe-Smythe is part of a zone where some, but not all, sidewalks are plowed — in between the downtown core (where most sidewalks can’t be plowed) and suburban Etobicoke, Scarborough and North York (where most sidewalks can be plowed), according to the city.
Dylan Reid, spokesperson for pedestrian advocacy group Walk Toronto, calls this approach “perverse.”
“The places where we have the most people using sidewalks, and where we have the greatest density of people, are the places where we don’t actually clear snow and ice from the sidewalk.”
The snow divide, Reid says, is a legacy from before amalgamation.
“The old city of Toronto didn’t plow its sidewalks and the suburbs did, and when they amalgamated, they didn’t want to spend the extra money to actually expand sidewalk clearing through the old city of Toronto,” he says.
The city’s 311 complaints show fewer calls about snow removal in the downtown core closer to the waterfront.
There’s a concentration of snow complaints in the west- end neighbourhoods around Rockcliffe-Smythe that would fall into the “some sidewalks cleared, some not” area, as well as in the east Beaches/western edge of Scarborough.
Per capita, the western chunk of the old ward of Scarborough Southwest — which also had the most overall noise complaints — topped the list for snow- and ice-related grumbles.
Out of the roughly 7,000 kilometres of sidewalk in Toronto, about 5,900 are plowed mechanically by the city, according to city spokesperson Eric Holmes.
“There are some sidewalks that, unfortunately, equipment cannot safely clear using mechanical means due to encroachments and existing structures (e.g. retaining walls, utility poles, on-street parking, narrow sidewalk etc.),” Holmes wrote in an email. The city offers free sidewalk clearance for seniors and people with disabilities who live in these areas.
The western side of Pritchard Ave. does not meet the criteria for sidewalk snow removal, he said, but he could not point to which, specifically. The eastern side of Pritchard Ave. is cleared because it’s considered a school route, he added.
So far in this relatively mild winter, the city has issued just four notices of inspection in response to complaints across Toronto and they were resolved without fines to homeowners, according to Holmes.
Last winter, the city issued eight fines.
This logic of plowing some ar- eas but not others leaves “a critical piece” of snow clearance missing, says Nancy Smith Lea, director of the Toronto Centre for Active Transportation (TCAT), who calls on the city to clear all sidewalks, as Ottawa does.
Residents don’t always shovel promptly, even though they can be fined for not clearing their stretches of sidewalk within 12 hours of snowfall. Even one icy patch can be dangerous.
“For many people this is the way that they move around the city,” she said, calling it an equity issue.
“The people who are held prisoner in their homes tend to be the elderly or people with disabilities, people who don’t have cars.”
A 2016 Toronto Public Health report found there were almost 30,000 emergency department visits and 2,800 hospitalizations among Toronto residents due to falls on snow or ice from 2006 to 2015.
This cost the provincial health-care system almost $4 million per year and the city $6.7 million a year in insurance liability claims.
And most falls happen in the areas that the city does not clear, according to the report.
Back in Rockcliffe-Smythe, it’s something Stoneham worries about.
“I can’t afford to fall down and break my hip because I work for myself,” she said, adding it’s unfair there’s sidewalk clearing in some areas and not others.
Aside from sidewalks, she thinks the whole neighbourhood is “neglected,” and often seems to be last on the list when it comes to road plowing.
Rockcliffe-Smythe Community Association co-chair Miriam Hawkins notes it has “wide streets and sidewalks,” sitting up against the eastern edge of Etobicoke. So there’d “be no issue” with them being too narrow to plow — if that’s why the city isn’t doing it.
“It almost sounds like they’re not committed anywhere in Toronto but if you’re lucky they might do it,” she says.
But as the dual global “megatrends” of an aging population and climate change intersect, cities need to start paying more attention to snow clearing, said Laura Tamblyn Watts, chief public policy officer at CARP, formerly known as the Canadian Association of Retired Persons.
“It’s not going to go away. It’s going to get much more complicated,” she said, with more older adults and more extreme storms.
“The human cost is real.”