Toronto Star

Cost to fix Gardiner takes big bite out of city’s roads budget

Project to use 44% of capital for roadways over 10 years, raising concerns for other repair work

- DAVID RIDER CITY HALL BUREAU CHIEF

Looming over the City of Toronto’s proposed capital spending plan, like an infrastruc­ture Godzilla hungry for cash, sits the Gardiner Expressway.

There is no organized push, at the moment, to revisit the bruising political debates of 2015 and 2016 that saw city council vote to rebuild the crumbling crosstown artery and leave elevated sections aloft, including a relocated curve from Cherry St. to the Don Valley Parkway.

But questions and tempers rise every budget season as briefing notes and charts lay bare the enormous cost of fixing the crumbling freeway and building the new “hybrid” DVP connection. Gardiner costs constrain all other project spending.

The roadway will gobble $2.2 billion of the transporta­tion department’s 10year capital spend. That’s 44 per cent of the total, although the highway carries only about seven per cent of commuters in and out of downtown, according to city figures. The east Gardiner carries only 5,000 cars per hour at peak times.

Eleven kilometres of freeway, seven of them elevated, will cost taxpayers more than Toronto’s other 5,386 kilometres of roadway — including the ground-hugging DVP — combined.

“The city had to choose between rebuilding the Gardiner and doing everything else, and council chose the Gardiner,” Coun. Gord Perks, a frequent budget critic of Mayor John Tory, said of a 2016 vote to proceed with the rebuild and “hybrid” connection to the DVP.

“If your car hits a pothole, or you wait too long for a bus, or there’s a leaky roof in your local community centre, that’s so we could save two minutes (in commuting time) for people travelling from Scarboroug­h, by rebuilding the Gardiner,” he said.

“And if you look at the rest of the road budget, right now we’re about a billion dollars behind on repairs. Within 10 years we’ll be $4 billion behind on repairs. The Gardiner sucks everything up.”

Mayor John Tory in 2015 rallied public support to keep aloft the 2.4-kilometre stretch east of Jarvis St., and reject a city staff recommenda­tion to bring that least-used section down to ground as an eight-lane boulevard with a ramp to the DVP.

Touting a University of Toronto study suggesting the $461million boulevard option could prolong commutes by 10 minutes at peak times — not the two to three minutes forecasted by city staff — Tory eked out a 2421 council win.

He then sought compromise with the primarily downtown councillor­s he had fought. That resulted in a 2016 vote of 36-5to move the elevated DVP link closer to the railway corridor and bring down the easternmos­t ramp to Logan Ave.

The “hybrid” link that freed up developabl­e land without significan­tly slowing traffic came with a cost, however. In “100-year lifecycle costs” — the long-term cost including a future rebuild, is $919 million. Framed as short-term, upfront capital costs, it’s $718 million.

But those projection­s were in 2013 dollars, and city staff say they can’t yet offer an update. A significan­t rise could trigger another council debate. But a change in plan, such as reverting to the city staff’s proposed boulevard option, would see more money spent on the Jarvis to Cherry section and design work done on the hybrid, lost.

Asked recently if he has any second thoughts about the Gardiner, given the huge competing needs for precious capital dollars, including Toronto Community Housing repairs, Tory said no.

“People are going to drive trucks and cars in the city — we hope that fewer of them will do so,” and that’s why the city is heavily investing in public transit, the mayor said. “But let’s be real — there are going to be people driving cars and trucks and commerce that has to be done around the city, so we’re making some investment in road transporta­tion.

“I think the Gardiner Expressway, while it’s a big investment, will prove to be a worthwhile investment when all’s said and done.”

Councillor Joe Cressy, whose post-council-cut Ward 10 Spadina-Fort York now includes the east Gardiner, called the highway 1950s infrastruc­ture in 21st century Toronto, where the downtown population is swelling and fewer and fewer people move by vehicle.

More than 60 per cent of rushhour commuter trips into downtown were people using TTC, regional transit, foot or bike, compared to 36 per cent in vehicles, according to city 2016 figures.

“In a growing city, the only solution is to reduce our dependence on cars and to incentiviz­e active public transporta­tion,” Cressy said. “Rebuilding elevated expressway­s does the opposite.”

Cressy thinks council will revisit the Gardiner at some point, but money already invested in the Gardiner re-do will likely deter councillor­s from considerin­g a radical change of course. Perks says those costs are good money after bad, so council should revisit it as soon as possible. Ward 2 Etobicoke Centre Coun. Stephen Holyday said Torontonia­ns should see the highway as an asset, not a money pit. Investment over a decade will yield decades more of benefits, he said.

“There are a large number of commuters, businesses and visitors who rely on it, and any changes at the east end will have ripple effects down the line,” he said. “This is money well spent.”

Matti Siemiatyck­i, a U of T associate professor and expert on urban infrastruc­ture, says similar debates rage in cities around the world as 1950s expressway­s hit the end of their lifecycle.

Prediction­s of traffic chaos when cities remove expressway­s, as Seoul did to create a park through the heart of the Korean capital, are often unfounded, he says. But so too were prediction­s nobody would want to live or work near expressway­s, as evidenced by growth around the Gardiner.

Since the Gardiner plans seem concrete, Siemiatyck­i said, perhaps the debate should be over who pays. That leads to a possible revival of Tory’s 2016 plan to toll the Gardiner and DVP, initially accepted by then-premier Kathleen Wynne, then rejected amid 905-belt opposition.

An estimated 35 per cent of Gardiner users don’t live in Toronto and pay nothing for its upkeep.

“We’re making a 100-year decision today about a piece of infrastruc­ture that may be becoming increasing­ly obsolete, so there’s a debate if it should be the users paying that cost,” Siemiatyck­i said.

“If the people who use the Gardiner consider it very beneficial in terms of saved commuting time, there is a fairness argument about paying for that convenienc­e and benefit, both for private users and for freight” deliveries.

While Premier Doug Ford, who has accused some councillor­s of waging a “war on the car” and who has suburban political support, might be expected to reject tolls, he has supported them in the past. In 2012, Ford, then an Etobicoke councillor who used the freeway daily, proposed helping cover Gardiner repair costs by partnering with the private sector to build a toll lane on the Gardiner alongside busier free lanes.

“I’d pay the $5 to get downtown every day,” Ford told the Globe and Mail in 2012. “I’d put a (Gardiner) toll road separate. You either get a freebie or a toll.”

GARDINER from A1

 ?? MARCUS OLENIUK TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO ?? Council voted in 2015 to reject a city staff recommenda­tion to bring down a 2.4-kilometre elevated stretch of the Gardiner.
MARCUS OLENIUK TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO Council voted in 2015 to reject a city staff recommenda­tion to bring down a 2.4-kilometre elevated stretch of the Gardiner.

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