Vancouver Sun

FOLLOW BARRETT’S EXAMPLE

Premier Horgan should opt for transit over urban freeways, says Eric Doherty.

- Eric Doherty is a Victoriaba­sed transporta­tion planning consultant and a member of the Council of Canadians Victoria chapter.

When Dave Barrett led the NDP to victory and became premier in September 1972, Vancouver was in the midst of a freeway revolt. East Vancouver and Chinatown residents had united against the planned downtown freeway and third crossing to the North Shore. Today, NDP Premier John Horgan faces a similar controvers­y over the proposal to replace the Massey tunnel with a 10-lane bridge.

Barrett could have gone for half-measures and tried to sell a more modest freeway into the downtown, combined with modest transit improvemen­ts. And the incentive to build for cars was strong; back then climate change wasn’t on anyone’s political radar.

He and his cabinet heard the shouts that “something has to be done” for commuters crossing from the North Shore to Vancouver. So they created the SeaBus, still one of the best-loved parts of Greater Vancouver’s transit system. Freeways never flattened Chinatown or cut off the West End from the waterfront, and only a few think a third road crossing to the North Shore should be a priority. And Barrett’s SeaBus was very inexpensiv­e compared with a freeway bridge or tunnel.

Barrett, and his allies, won in downtown Vancouver. But he also boldly decided to build a region-wide network of rapid-transit lines instead of freeways. To keep costs down and allow a rapid build-out, these light-rail lines would use the old interurban railway right-of-ways. His vision even extended to considerin­g a single-track light-rail tunnel beside the Massey tunnel to serve South Delta and Tsawwassen.

He didn’t win re-election, so his plans were largely forgotten as freeway building became the default response to congestion outside of the downtown core. Even the NDP government­s of the 1990s took only half-measures to prioritize transit.

In the ’70s, Barrett’s transit over freeways position was radical. Today, it’s mainstream. Only one mayor supports defeated premier Christy Clark’s multibilli­ondollar plan to build a 10-lane freeway bridge to replace the Massey tunnel. Horgan sides with the other 20 Metro Vancouver mayors who oppose the Massey bridge, and favour funding the rapidtrans­it lines in the regional transporta­tion plan instead.

A key lesson Horgan should learn from Barrett is that cost-effective transit improvemen­ts can successful­ly replace proposals like the third crossing and the Massey bridge. There is nothing fancy or expensive about the SeaBus. The name says it all, a bus that runs on water.

The B.C. Liberals once proposed to replace their Massey tunnel freeway expansion plan with bus lanes and rapid bus. In 2009, then-transporta­tion minister Kevin Falcon told the Richmond Review that the bus lanes and tunnel upgrades would be sufficient “for easily another 50 years.” The B.C. Liberals built some of the bus lanes, but cut back on bus service through the tunnel instead of providing the frequent, rapid-bus service they promised.

The first step for the B.C. NDP should be to help TransLink and the mayors provide what the B.C. Liberals promised, a major increase in bus service through the Massey Tunnel.

Completing the bus lanes to the Canada Line in Richmond is also essential to provide a desirable alternativ­e to the Massey bridge proposal. Rail transit to Ladner and Tsawwassen, and to the North Shore, may be worthwhile next steps — but buses and SeaBuses work.

The much bigger step Horgan needs to take is to reorient transporta­tion priorities across B.C. to reduce the climate pollution that is fuelling ever more destructiv­e wildfires and floods. The B.C. NDP promises to slash greenhouse gas pollution from transporta­tion by 30 per cent in only 13 years, and the federal-provincial Climate Framework commits B.C. to shift infrastruc­ture spending from road expansion to transit to fulfil Canada’s Paris climate commitment­s.

To hold the Green-NDP alliance together, the NDP must move decisively on these commitment­s. And that means urban highway expansion must be the last resort, not the default option.

 ?? RICHARD LAM/FILES ?? The government must decide whether to replace the Massey tunnel, shown above, with a 10-lane bridge.
RICHARD LAM/FILES The government must decide whether to replace the Massey tunnel, shown above, with a 10-lane bridge.

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