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  #341  
Old Posted Jul 2, 2025, 1:21 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Richard Eade View Post
Well, here you go; the Ring Road that Tim is (not, I expect) pushing for:

Fantastic! Let's do it!

Send that to Tim and all the others pushing for a ring road.
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  #342  
Old Posted Jul 24, 2025, 4:20 AM
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Ring road out as Ottawa council OK's transportation master plan
The document establishes priorities and will guide development of the city’s transportation system until 2046.

By Aedan Helmer, Ottawa Citizen
Published Jul 23, 2025 | Last updated 5 hours ago


The city’s finalized Transportation Master Plan passed through Ottawa council this week with a plan that sets out transit and road priorities for the next 20 years, but notably excludes a ring road that had been raised at the “11th hour.”

College Coun. Laine Johnson introduced a motion at the July 23 council session to “refocus the city’s priorities … (and) make sure we have a clear direction for council and for staff to pursue.”

The TMP “should not have the endorsement of any plan not contemplated by the province,” such as a ring road, Johnson said.

The motion called on all levels of government “to prioritize sustainable, data-driven transportation infrastructure investments” and directed city staff to “engage with provincial and federal counterparts to obtain up-to-date information on their respective projects in order to assess any impact to projects identified in the TMP.”

The motion passed with a 16-8 vote, with notable dissent from Beacon Hill-Cyrville Coun. Tim Tierney, who had raised the idea of a ring road instead of a sixth interprovincial bridge at Kettle Island.

Tierney’s suggestion for a ring road was raised at the June 26 session of the public works and infrastructure committee, which approved the TMP and initially gave support to Tierney’s motion by a 9-2 vote.

Several committee members changed their vote as the TMP was brought forward to council.


<more>

https://ottawacitizen.com/news/ring-...portation-plan
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  #343  
Old Posted Jul 25, 2025, 7:59 PM
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How the vote went. Yeas are to kill the ring roads, nays are to keep it in.

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  #344  
Old Posted Jul 27, 2025, 3:42 PM
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Ottawa’s master plan to prioritize public transit over roads

By Rachel Morgan, CityNews
Posted Jul 25, 2025


The City of Ottawa said it is putting forth a “transit first” approach when looking at moving people around the municipality.

Council approved the updated Transportation Master Plan Wednesday to move forward with efforts to improve the transit system up to 2046.



The city has dedicated approximately $3.9 billion in capital investments projects which is divided into $2.3 billion in transit projects and $1.6 billion in road projects.

The plan outlines both the Needs-Based Network which identifies all projects that are needed to address the city’s mobility needs to 2046, and the Priority Transit Network which identifies a subset of projects to be prioritized and implemented by 2046. The Priority Transit Network also includes the third stage of O-Train extensions to Barrhaven and Kanata-Stittsville with an additional $8.3 billion price tag.

Other priority projects include new and expanded Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) corridors on the Baseline-Heron Transitway, Cumberland Transitway, South Transitway, Southwest Transitway, Kanata North Transitway, and the Heron/Walkley Transitway.

“The City’s ‘transit first’ approach ensures that road investments were only considered where transit would not be enough to meet travel demand,” the city said in a media release.

The city says road projects were only included in the Needs-Based Network if they fulfilled at the needs of addressing a road capacity deficiency or providing transportation access to support new development. Based on this criteria, the city says several road projects from the 2013 Transportation Master Plan are not included in the new network.

Ottawa’s population is expected to grow to 1.4 million people by 2046. The city expects to see demand for an additional 1.2 million daily trips. It approximates that half of these trips will take place in vehicles.

The city’s Official Plan sets the goal of having the majority of trips made by sustainable modes of transit — including walking, cycling, transit and car-pooling — by 2046. Currently 43.4 per cent of daily trips are made using sustainable transportation. The city says that projects in the Priority Network, in conjunction with active transportation projects, are predicted to result in a daily sustainable mode share of 48 per cent by 2046.

https://ottawa.citynews.ca/2025/07/2...it-over-roads/
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  #345  
Old Posted Aug 8, 2025, 1:08 PM
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City of Ottawa to invest $4.5B in new transit network, but more money needed

The network includes a series of O-Train extensions, transitway corridors, bus lane projects and transit priority corridors intended to provide more transit options for Ottawans.

By Paula Tran, Ottawa Citizen
Published Jun 29, 2025


The City of Ottawa plans to invest $4.5 billion in a new “needs-based” transit network that aims to improve public transit reliability, with an additional $8.3 billion needed from other levels of government.

The plan includes a series of O-Train extensions, transitway corridors, bus lane projects, transit priority corridors that are intended to give Ottawans more transit options.

The Transportation Master Plan Capital Infrastructure Plan, which was submitted to the public works and infrastructure committee last week, stated that the City of Ottawa wants half of all trips to be made by sustainable modes of travel, such as walking, cycling, transit and car-pooling, by 2046.

The needs-based transit network aims to increase transit service hours, active transportation investments and other initiatives to encourage sustainable travel choices, the report said.

City staff also said the new network will be needed to meet Ottawa’s mobility with projected population and employment growth. City staff said nearly 200,000 new residents have moved to Ottawa since 2013, and the city is projected to add 400,000 more people over the next 20 years.

One of the projects under the needs-based transit network is the Cumberland Transitway, a bus rapid transit corridor from Blair Station to Millennium Station. The transitway will run along Innes Road and Blackburn Hamlet Bypass.

This is a shift from the 2013 Transportation Master Plan, which would have run from Blair Station to the east of Tenth Line. The original proposal also called for the transitway to run along Renaud Road and Anderson Road.

Additionally, only one station is proposed in Blackburn Hamlet instead of two.

City staff said the revised route will provide “sufficient capacity to accommodate projected ridership” while “significantly reducing costs” and “improving constructability.”

The report also said the revised alignment was necessary to move the project forward.

“While an Environmental Assessment update would be required, the revised alignment is considered both cost-effective and feasible, whereas the previous alignment was not feasible due to lands and NCC opposition to the proposed alignment through the Greenbelt,” the updated Transportation Master Plan said.

“The Cumberland Transitway is one of the highest ranked Transitway projects and is urgently needed. Without the proposed change in alignment, the City would not have the NCC’s support and the project would not be able to move forward and could not be submitted for federal or provincial funding.”

Priority transit network to be implemented by 2046

In addition to the needs-based transit network, the city also identified the highest priority projects that are expected to be implemented within the next 20 years.

The projects included new or upgraded bus rapid transit corridors for the Baseline-Heron Transitway from Algonquin College to Billings Bridge and the Cumberland Transitway from Blair Road to Chapel Hill Station to Esprit Drive. These two projects were recommended by city staff to be funded first based on need and readiness.

The O-Train line extensions include a Line 1 extension from Algonquin Station to Barrhaven and a Line 3 extension from Moodie Station to Hazeldean Station.

City staff said the rapid bus projects will be injected with $2.3 billion from the city. The rest will be funded by other levels of government.

The line extensions will cost an additional $8.3 billion, the city said, and it is fully reliant on funding from other levels of government.

City administration recommended the entire network be submitted for funding from the Canada Public Transit Fund.

“However, even with 100 per cent capital funding, the operating costs of these projects are very significant and are not expected to be substantially offset by increased fare revenue from these extensions,” the Transportation Master Plan said.

https://ottawacitizen.com/news/ottaw...on-master-plan
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  #346  
Old Posted Aug 8, 2025, 1:08 PM
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So how did Blackburn get two stations when the Transitway bypassed it, but only gets one now that the Transitway goes along its border?
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