Broadway rapid transit- Is the SkyTrain subway option a done deal? – From July 2011

Broadway rapid transit- Is the SkyTrain subway option a done deal?

Posted by on Friday, July 22, 2011 Ai?? Reprinted November 27, 2012

It seems that Surrey mayor, Dianne Watts, hasAi??to look over her shoulder and see what her counterparts are up to in Vancouver, before she supports a gas tax increase.

It seems a Broadway SkyTrain subway is a done deal and this gas tax money she wants to fund light rail in surrey, will probably not go to fund the stale-dated (N)Evergreen line, butAi??a SkyTrain subway in Vancouver. Any agreement on transit funding must be regarded as a mere scrap of paper that will soon be discarded at the first politically opportune time.

I think it is time for Mayor Watts and the rest of the South Fraser mayors lobby strong and hard for the BC government to cut TransLink in two; those who have SkyTrain and want to continue building with SkyTrain and those who want to build with cheaper transit options.

The refusal of Vancouver politicians to consider modern LRT for Broadway, just confirm that South Fraser taxpayers are regarded as peasants and vassals, country bumpkins, who are nothing more than tax ‘milch-cows’ to fund Vancouver’s ambitious and extremely expensive SkyTrain subway building program.

Update: Nothing has changed as the City of Vancouver Engineering Dept. is hell bent to secure a SkyTrain subway for Broadway, no matter what the cost. Vancouver Councillor Geoff Megs and a sundry of NDP types are cheer-leading a multi billion dollar subway for Broadway, paid for – well you guessed it, the long suffering South Fraser taxpayers. The question is; “Has, NDP premier in waiting, Adrian Dix, alrady agreed to fund a SkyTrain subway for Broa


Vancouver mayoral candidates Push for Broadway tunnel

but business owners, pointing to Cambie Corridor Canada Line experience, fear business loss if subway option is approved.

By Glen Korstrom ai??i?? Business in Vancouver

Vancouverai??i??s mayoral candidates are pushing for a SkyTrain tunnel link under the Broadway corridor to be the regionai??i??s top transit priority once Evergreen Line financing is confirmed.

The proposed link would connect with the Millennium Line and go as far west as Arbutus ai??i?? a route that will inevitably cause friction given that many Broadway business owners fear any type of tunnel construction along their corridor will kill their enterprise.

TransLink spokesman Ken Hardie told Business in Vancouver that TransLinkai??i??s board has yet to determine the top regional priority after the Evergreen Line.

ai???Everything from Surrey rapid transit to Broadway rapid transit to gondolas going up Burnaby Mountain all fall into the queue,ai??? he said.

Vancouver Mayor Gregor Robertson and his Non-Partisan challenger Susan Anton agree that reducing congestion on the Broadway corridor is vital for the region.

ai???Itai??i??s crucial that we have the Sky-Train technology through the Broadway corridor,ai??? Robertson told BIV in an exclusive interview June 29.

ai???The growth and population and the traffic challenges in the Broadway corridor are unsustainable, so weai??i??ve got to see the Broadway corridor served by the big pipe.ai???

Anton described the proposed link as a ai???regional line with regional importance.ai???

The Broadway corridor is the second busiest employment centre outside the downtown core, and TransLink estimates that there are 110,000 trips along the Broadway corridor each day.

ai???In central Broadway, the only way you can manage the number of trips is with SkyTrain technology,ai??? Anton said.

Anton’s and Robertsonai??i??s mutual belief that SkyTrain is the only viable technology in the Broadway corridor worries business owners and frustrates light-rail advocates. Ray’s Beauty school for Hairdressing owner Gina Ray told BIV that she will close her 12-year-old business if regional politicians approve any form of tunnel along Broadway.

She likes the idea of a burrowed tunnel but fears that construction will cause more disruption than authorities say.

ai???I donai??i??t trust them,ai??? she said. ai???On Cambie Street there were so many businesses that went bankrupt or had to close. They did not expect to have the cut-and-cover [construction method].ai???

Indeed,Ai?? Hazel & Co owner Susan Heyes suffered a drastic drop in customers for her maternity wear store when the Canada Line construction consortium dug a tunnel outside her store.

She lost aAi?? B.C. Court of Appeal judgment after she sued to recover $600,000 in damages from the consortium for business losses. Her only hope now is for the Supreme Court of Canada

to agree to hear the case.

The West Broadway Business Improvement AssociationAi?? (WBBIA) officially opposes a tunnel. Its directors have examined TransLinkai??i??s seven options for improved transit in the Broadway corridor and decided that at-grade transportation, whether it involves more buses or a light-rail system, is preferable.

ai???We donai??i??t want a SkyTrain tunnel. Whether it is cut and cover or a bored tunnel doesn’tai??i??t matter to us, because bored tunnels take longer and construction would cut off all the east-west traffic on West Broadway for a number of years,ai??? said WBBIA director Donna Dobo, who owns the West Broadway costume store Just Imagine.

Light-rail advocate Malcolm Johnston has been lobbying to build light rail on Broadway for decades. Light rail would not require construction of a tunnel. It would instead run at grade along the existing corridor.

Now part of Rail For The Valley, Johnston spends much of his time lobbying to have light rail in the Fraser Valley. But he still thinks light rail on Broadway is the more practical and a better value than building a subway.

ai???TransLinkai??i??s planning is arcane,ai??? Johnston said. ai???Itai??i??s dated, and they misinform the public. What else can I say? I wouldai??i??t trust them to build an outhouse.ai???

Johnston, who is familiar with TransLinkai??i??s seven proposals, believes the transportation authority has skewed its figures to make rapid transit appear to be a more viable option than either light rail or buses.

He believes TransLink pulls numbers out of the air, such as its assertion that 110,000 bus trips are made daily in the corridor.

Despite BIVai??i??s repeated requests for details about that figure and estimates, TransLink was unable to provide that data.

ai???TransLink says SkyTrain attracts more ridership than light rail. This is absolutely unproven,ai??? Johnston said.

ai???Sit down for this. Light rail has a bigger capacity than SkyTrain. This is contrary to the spin that TransLink has. De facto, a streetcar or even light rail has proven to have higher capacity than a subway unless you build a London-style metro [with multiple lines and longer trains].ai???

gkorstrom@biv.com

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