Vancouver Sun

Light rail will solve Surrey’s transit demands

City’s explosive growth calls for it, says Stephan Mehr.

- Stephan Mehr is director of TransLink’s Surrey-Newton-Guildford LRT Project.

Better transporta­tion for everyone in Surrey is one step closer to reality.

Last week, the Surrey-Newton- Guildford Light Rail Transit Project reached a critical milestone with the formal approval of the business case by the government­s of Canada and B.C. The project is now fully approved and fully funded with backing by all three levels of government. The procuremen­t process officially began last week and my team is working to have B.C.’s first light-rail project carrying passengers across Surrey by 2024.

We all know that Surrey is growing. We see it every day. More people, more jobs and yes, more traffic. There’s another 400,000 people expected to live in Surrey by 2040. That makes it B.C.’s fastest-growing city.

This is a historic opportunit­y. ... We are closer today than ever before.

With this in mind, we worked with the City of Surrey to carefully study population and employment growth, detail Surrey’s transporta­tion needs and establish its livability goals. Years of work and discussion have gone into the decision that a light-rail system would be the best solution for Surrey to reduce congestion, meet growing transit demand and support the developmen­t we all want: complete, connected and livable neighbourh­oods.

People look for convenient public-transit options when deciding where to live, work and spend time. Light-rail transit in Surrey will stimulate economic developmen­t, job growth and density. This boosts transit demand but also increases employment and housing options. There will be more than 28,000 jobs within 400 metres of an LRT stop in 2024, and more than 34,000 jobs by 2033.

Surrey LRT will serve 104th Avenue and King George Boulevard, connecting three of Surrey’s largest town centres. Three-quarters of all transit trips that start in Surrey end in Surrey. That confirms the need for better, more frequent local transit services and connection­s.

The LRT will replace the 96 B-Line once it’s open. This B-Line is the fastest-growing B-Line in TransLink’s network. It saw about five million passenger boardings in 2017, a 50 per cent increase from 2014. At that rate, ridership demand will outstrip the B-Line’s capacity within a decade.

LRT, which can move more than four times the number of passengers than the B-Line, will meet forecast demand well into the future while providing accessible and comfortabl­e service along two important corridors.

Customers don’t want to have to wait long for a ride. LRT will be more frequent, with fiveminute waits during peak period, and a travel time of 27 minutes or less.

Travel times for the 96 B-Line during peak congestion range between 29 minutes and 50 minutes.

B.C. is joining cities and regions around the world that are choosing light-rail transit to create more vibrant, connected communitie­s. We will learn from the experience­s of the more than 400 light-rail projects around the world to make sure we can build this project in the least disruptive way.

This is a historic opportunit­y. The SNG LRT project is the greatest infusion of transit funding for the area south of the Fraser and the largest capital investment in Surrey. There is much work to do over the next few years before we can ride LRT in B.C., but we are closer today than ever before and are thrilled to say: LRT is on the way!

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