Quote:
Originally Posted by lightrail
It frustrates me that this government is so pro-freeway building to the point of not blinking an eye at the cost. Yet, try to get funding for a much needed rapid transit line, and all you get is stonewalling, and matching grant requirements and funding sharing and P3 etc.
Now they've announced a bridge, with no funding provided, no environmental assessment, etc.
It is disgusting. Yes, the tunnel needs to be replaced, but there was no consideraiton of looking at serious alternatives, just that it had to be done. There is no referendum on how to fun it and the roads it will bring, unlike transit which is now completely stalled due to a ridiculous referendum requirement in November 2014.
Obviously, the government only cares about LNG and resource exports.
Oh well, the congestion will just move north to Knight St and Oak Street bridges. This government will never learn - welcome back to to the 1950s.
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This was now 5 years ago:
http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/showthread.php?t=162194
Announcement on extension of Expo-Line could come Thursday
Wednesday, December 10 - 03:09:26 PM Lyle Fisher
SURREY (NEWS1130) - Transportation Minister Kevin Falcon and TransLink CEO Tom Prendergast will be making a major announcement Thursday morning at Surrey's Gateway SkyTrain station. There's speculation it could be about the proposed expansion of the Expo-Line into Surrey.
Back in January Premier Gordon Campbell unveiled his $14 billion transportation plan for the region, and said a 6 kilometre extension of the Expo Line to Guildford would be completed by the year 2020. Falcon said an expanded line would likely continue along 104th Avenue, down 152nd Street to the Fraser Highway and end at 168th Street.
Anita Huberman with the Surrey Board of Trade says she's hopeful the expansion gets fast-tracked by the province. "There also needs to be a 'light rail' option for Surrey. Surrey is a huge city, and we have different areas where transit is inaccessable, so we're hoping (for) a combination of light rail and rapid transit. We need options to get around the city. We have 1,500 people a month moving into Surrey."
Sigh, no magic political wand for transit South of the Fraser, just more and more freeways. The government says, hmm we should build a bridge, presto, 1 year later, some quasi study is done and boom, the premier announces a start date. No environmental assessment, hardly any studies done, no business case, no financial numbers at all.