Toronto Star

Guy wire placement a real ‘head scratcher’

- JACK LAKEY SPECIAL TO THE STAR What’s broken in your neighbourh­ood? Wherever you are in Greater Toronto, we want to know. Email jlakey@thestar.ca or follow @TOStarFixe­r on Twitter

Guy wires are essential for keeping wire-laden utility poles standing straight and strong, but some are less obtrusive than others. Most people don’t notice them unless they happen to walk into one, which is why they’re wrapped in plastic — usually yellow — that makes them more visible and protects people from the worst of a collision.

It’s also why guy wires are usually anchored to the ground in the boulevard, where people are a lot less likely to bounce off them.

Which makes the placement of a guy wire in the middle of the sidewalk at the northeast corner of Church and Carlton streets all the more puzzling. Evan Roberts emailed me about it, saying that he knows from reading Fixer columns “how much you love wires and other objects in peoples’ way.” He described the location of the wire as a “head scratcher.”

The wire has been anchored in the same spot for many years, next to a transit shelter on the sidewalk, said Roberts, until the shelter was taken away to make room for condo constructi­on on the same corner.

Its positionin­g, relative to the shelter, made it less likely that people would walk into with the wire, but with the shelter gone it’s smack dab in the middle of the newly poured sidewalk, he said.

STATUS: The vast majority of utility poles in the city are owned by Toronto Hydro, but this one is strung with lines that are part of the overhead wiring for TTC streetcars. It also has traffic signals and signs attached to it, as well as a street light, making it multi-purpose. So, whose pole is it? I started with Toronto Hydro and got this reply from spokespers­on Russell Baker: “I can confirm that the guy wire at the northeast corner of Church and Carlton is not owned by Toronto Hydro.” I tried transporta­tion services, which is still checking. I’m still waiting to hear from the TTC.

 ?? JACK LAKEY FOR THE TORONTO STAR ?? A guy wire in the middle of the sidewalk at Church and Carlton had been next to a transit shelter, which was recently removed.
JACK LAKEY FOR THE TORONTO STAR A guy wire in the middle of the sidewalk at Church and Carlton had been next to a transit shelter, which was recently removed.

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