Windsor Star

$15 million set aside to study high-speed rail corridor

- MEGAN STACEY mstacey@postmedia.com twitter.com/MeganatLFP­ress

It’s full speed ahead for Ontario’s proposed high-speed rail system, but with early plans for the Kitchener-to-London leg continuing to divide the region’s voters, the issue could be a central theme in the looming provincial election, at least in southweste­rn Ontario.

The province kicked off a $15-million study of the impacts of laying down high-speed rail lines between Kitchener and London, the next phase of a plan one expert called “a winning issue for the government.”

The Toronto-to-Windsor rail corridor is a lifeline for southweste­rn Ontario, but rural voters have raised concerns rail lines will carve up their communitie­s and stall emergency vehicles. Despite the backlash from the region’s Tory stronghold­s, Zac Spicer, a political scientist with the University of Toronto’s Institute on Municipal Finance and Governance, said it’s easy for opposition parties to back the initial study of high-speed rail.

The Progressiv­e Conservati­ves “can take a proactive but cautious approach and say ‘we’re going to keep studying this thing, but we’re going to make sure it works for everyone.’ They have a little more street cred out there to say ‘we understand your ridings better than the Liberals do,’ ” Spicer said. Ontario voters head to the polls in three months, and the Progressiv­e Conservati­ve party is days away from choosing its new leader. The proposed rapid rail system — with an estimated price tag of $20 billion — would make London to Toronto a 73-minute trip as early as 2025. The corridor could be extended to Windsor by about 2031, during a second building phase. Between Kitchener-Waterloo to Toronto, high-speed rail would use existing track built for GO Transit. The provincial Ministry of Transporta­tion is in talks with Metrolinx for that part of the route, but it won’t take the same kind of investigat­ion as London, where there is no infrastruc­ture for high-speed rail.

Four rural communitie­s in southweste­rn Ontario — including one in Middlesex and two in Oxford County — have urged the province to look at alternativ­es, including “high performanc­e rail” that would use passenger rail lines and allow vehicles to cross the tracks.

Kelly Elliott, a Thames Centre councillor who’s part of a steering group formed by the four rural areas, said the goal isn’t to kill highspeed rail altogether.

“We know that using highperfor­mance rail or high-frequency rail or enhanced Via would provide the same benefit for the city of London but won’t impact our rural communitie­s and small towns ... like high-speed rail.”

The Liberals have championed high-speed rail before, including around the time of the last provincial election, Spicer said.

“It’s a vote-getter for the Liberals.”

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