Toronto Star

A creeping retreat from SmartTrack

Mayor has started to walk away from parts of his transit plan that were impractica­l from the start

- Royson James

It’s begun in earnest: Mayor John Tory’s slow retreat from his controvers­ial, multibilli­on-dollar SmartTrack transit proposal.

It’s always been a seductive project: 53 transit stations in “seven years, not 17,” operating mainly on existing rail lines and connecting Markham to the Pearson airport area, via downtown.

But, upon further review, it’s an idea too simple and sunny to be true.

The latest word is, changes to Tory’s election-win- ning proposal might even make it smarter, faster, cheaper. Go figure. On top of its exaggerate­d conception, SmartTrack proponents now shamelessl­y try to sell us another deception.

Commuters don’t know whether to laugh or cry or slip into despair.

If the news didn’t come on the same day as a TTC report asking for an extra $400 million for the delayed Spadina subway extension, commuters might even have swallowed the pill.

As it stands, the pullback from the mayor’s unsupporta­ble SmartTrack project grew more apparent by the day — even as Tory doubled down and tried to assure everyone that all was well.

Since his election a year ago, it has become obvious that the heavy rail line capable of running GO Transit vehicles cannot be built west of the Mount Dennis area as proposed without engineerin­g feats approachin­g $5 billion. That’s three to four times what an LRT would cost.

On the opposite northeast segment up to Unionville, the new tracks would duplicate service on the nearby GO Stouffvill­e line. Worse, the project seems to cannibaliz­e riders from the proposed Scarboroug­h subway, an extension of the Bloor-Danforth line north into the Scarboroug­h Town Centre. To avoid the redundancy, Tory’s staffers have been pushing city staff to nudge the Scarboroug­h subway route farther east, even along leafy Bellamy Rd. for crying out loud — adding ridiculous costs and heaping scorn on that subway project, which is already a gross over-build.

The central piece of SmartTrack, wisely using existing GO lines, may have some resonance. But it is perceived to exist at the expense of the Downtown Relief Line, the transit planning project that, historical­ly, all the experts have identified from the dawn of subways in Toronto.

This idea clearly needed a redux. So, expect the mayor to propose a phased approach, with the central piece going ahead with Metrolinx support and the questionab­le pieces dumped into the “future build” dustbin.

Up in the towers at City Hall and at Metrolinx headquarte­rs, the bureaucrat­s have all lost their hair trying to devise ways to make the mayor’s plan stand up to scrutiny. Try as they may, it won’t pass rigorous examinatio­n, though there may be excellent parts of it.

It’s faster and cheaper and more practical to use existing GO rail lines, where possible, to increase transit service. It’s also instructiv­e that a politician can marshal a lot of support in a short time for a public project if he or she is resolute and persistent. Tory got a promise of $2.6 billion from the federal government and similar amounts from the Liberals at Queen’s Park.

Rarely has a Toronto politician promoted a transit project with such glee, vigour and surety — minus even a modicum of evidence that the line is needed, will attract riders and fits with other planned projects.

In fact, it is scary how easy it was for Tory to gain provincial and federal support for a scheme that no one had studied and few were convinced would work as Tory has suggested.

City staff are working on a master transporta­tion plan to guide decisions over the next 50 years. Within weeks, city councillor­s should get comprehens­ive studies and reports that are to provide guidance on where to build which transit projects — based on objective data and projection­s.

If Tory truly intends to do what’s right for commuters, he will follow where the evidence leads.

If he applies the same energy to the coming Feeling Congested recommende­d projects as he’s done to SmartTrack, it is possible that Toronto might get subways where needed, embrace LRTs in the right corridors, and busways where appropriat­e.

For decades, Toronto’s political leaders have begged the provincial and federal government­s to fund the city’s transit needs, citing economic and social benefits. Today, both government­s are listening. Blow this propitious period by building transit that gets politician­s elected but doesn’t move people, and our children will curse us into the next century.

As such, any pullback from the SmartTrack scheme is a good sign. Royson James usually appears Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday. Email: rjames@thestar.ca

 ??  ?? John Tory’s SmartTrack is an idea too sunny to be true, writes Royson James.
John Tory’s SmartTrack is an idea too sunny to be true, writes Royson James.
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 ??  ?? Workers at the York University stop, in the Spadina subway extension.
Workers at the York University stop, in the Spadina subway extension.

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