Toronto Star

Lastman criticizes subway extension in Scarboroug­h

Project would leave ‘a lot of unhappy people,’ ex-mayor says

- BETSY POWELL CITY HALL BUREAU

Mel Lastman, the first mayor of amalgamate­d Toronto, suggested Tuesday that an abandoned light-rail transit project made more sense than a singlestop subway extension in Scarboroug­h.

But it’s also too late to reverse course again, he said. “I love subways, please, I would accept a subway over anything,” said Lastman. He and other past may- ors and chairs were at Toronto city hall for the unveiling of pre-amalgamati­on photo display. “But when somebody says to me, ‘Here’s a couple of billion dollars and we’ll pay for it, we’ll pay the operating cost, and everything else,’ I couldn’t pass that up, never,” Lastman told reporters.

Council, which began meeting Tuesday, is being asked to revive the sevenstop LRT line to Scarboroug­h Town Centre.

They’re also being asked to scrap a proposed extension backed by Mayor John Tory.

The LRT’s cost ($1.8 billion in 2010 dollars) was fully funded by the provincial and federal government­s before council voted in 2013 to build a costlier subway extension instead. (The province agreed to negotiate LRT operating costs, but no arrangemen­t was ever reached.)

The switch was regrettabl­e, suggested Lastman, who championed the five-stop Sheppard subway that remains the least-used line in the TTC network.

“Now, that they’re (Scarboroug­h residents) going to get one station — one station and a lot of unhappy people, because they build the one station, then they have to take a bus or something back to where they want to go, and it’s just going to be chaos, and it’s too bad,” the 83-yearold said.

However, Lastman said council should stick to the subway plan even if “everybody loses.”

“The taxpayers for sure, because they’re not going to get what they think they’re going to get, and it’s going to cost taxpayers money.”

Tory, who long ago served as Lastman’s campaign co-chair, joked that the occasion felt like old times, when he tried to manage the notorious shoot-from-the-lip politician in his media scrums.

Lastman, who said he is “living a wonderful life,” said politician­s nowadays don’t understand how many people, particular­ly seniors on fixed incomes, are struggling to make ends meet.

“Take a look at the price of food — you go in to buy apples, take a look at the price, to buy a celery or a lettuce, eight bucks, six bucks — it’s crazy,” Lastman said.

While council was debating next year’s budget direction, Lastman warned councillor­s they will be “in trouble” if they start to raise taxes that hit Torontonia­ns, because “people can’t afford it.”

“They’re going to get fed up with politician­s completely . . . it’s the middle class that are getting hurt, they’re getting hurt bad. There’s not going to be a middle class the way things are going right now.”

Lastman served as mayor of the former city of North York from1973 until 1997, when he was elected the first mayor of the amalgamate­d city of Toronto. He served two terms, until 2003.

 ?? RICHARD LAUTENS/TORONTO STAR ?? Former mayor Mel Lastman was at city hall on Tuesday for a photo unveiling.
RICHARD LAUTENS/TORONTO STAR Former mayor Mel Lastman was at city hall on Tuesday for a photo unveiling.
 ?? RICHARD LAUTENS/TORONTO STAR ?? Mayor John Tory talks with former mayor Barbara Hall and Mel Lastman.
RICHARD LAUTENS/TORONTO STAR Mayor John Tory talks with former mayor Barbara Hall and Mel Lastman.

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