Toronto Star

Highway 413 to begin constructi­on next year

Announceme­nt comes days before Milton byelection

- ROBERT BENZIE QUEEN’S PARK BUREAU CHIEF

Premier Doug Ford is racing to show progress on the proposed Highway 413 against the backdrop of Thursday’s Milton tightly fought byelection.

Speaking to reporters in Caledon on Tuesday, Ford touted the controvers­ial 52-kilometre freeway between Milton and Vaughan that will connect Highways 401 and 400.

“Highway 413 is going to be a game-changer for the region,” said the premier, who was flanked by union leaders whose members are expect to build the road that goes through Caledon.

“I’m thrilled to announce that constructi­on on this highway will begin in 2025,” he said, noting it would create 3,500 jobs annually during constructi­on such as “heavy equipment operators, drilling and coring contractor­s, concrete and steel workers, utility contractor­s, environmen­tal specialist­s, laboratory technologi­sts and safety inspectors.”

Ford’s comments came after a major hurdle in constructi­on of the highway was cleared two weeks ago, when Queen’s Park and Ottawa agreed to establish “a joint working group in which provincial and federal officials will recommend appropriat­e measures to minimize environmen­tal impacts in areas of federal environmen­tal jurisdicti­on.”

That will complement the ongoing provincial environmen­tal assessment process.

While Highway 413 was a cornerston­e pledge of the Progressiv­e Conservati­ves’ successful re-election campaign in 2022 — and Ford’s party won every riding along the proposed route — it remains a contentiou­s project.

NDP Leader Marit Stiles warned the Tories are “spending billions of taxpayers’ money on a project with no end date in sight … a project that also threatens Ontario’s farmlands and gives preferenti­al treatment to insiders.”

Stiles said to tackle gridlock, Ford should make the privately operated Highway 407 “toll-free for truckers — freeing up space on the 401 to get commuters home to their families faster.”

Liberal Leader Bonnie Crombie said that “just like the Greenbelt scandal, the ineffectiv­e $10-billion Highway 413 is designed to benefit one group of people: Doug Ford’s wealthy insiders, Conservati­ve donors and rich land speculator­s.”

Environmen­tal Defence, which opposes the freeway that would cut through protected lands, pave over thousands of acres of farmland and cut across streams and rivers more than 100 times, agreed: “the same pattern is playing out with 413” as it did with the Greenbelt land swap scandal now being investigat­ed by the RCMP.

“The Ontario government is working overtime to convince people that this latest plan to cut into the Greenbelt is a done deal,” said Environmen­tal Defence’s Phil Pothen.

“But Highway 413 will not be built by 2025, or at all, as long as the federal government does its job by denying permits to destroy federally protected species at risk and their habitats,” said Pothen.

Tuesday’s announceme­nt came ahead of byelection­s Thursday in Milton and Lambton-Kent-Middlesex, ridings that had been held by Tory cabinet ministers who resigned.

While the Tories are confident of holding the London-area riding of Lambton-Kent-Middlesex, which had been represente­d by former labour minister Monte McNaughton, polls suggest Milton, the former riding of ex-red tape reduction minister Parm Gill, is a dogfight between the Tories and Liberals.

Premier Doug Ford said 3,500 jobs will be created annually during the constructi­on of Highway 413

‘‘ Highway 413 will not be built by 2025, or at all, as long as the federal government does its job by denying permits. PHIL POTHEN ENVIRONMEN­TAL DEFENCE

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