Quote:
Originally Posted by aberdeen5698
...because that's the way the Provincial government set it up. Seriously, if this is such a safety risk then why can't the provincial government step up to the plate on funding?
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Then you'd have the City of Vancouver asking for provincial funding for the Burrard Bridge, Granville Bridge and Cambie Bridge
- hey, they are already trying for the viaducts removal!
... or Richmond asking for Dinsmore Bridge funding, etc.
Municipalities always have their hands out for funding.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Meraki
That raises the question of why is TransLink is responsible for random pieces of the road network, hampered by restrictions set by the Province while the other projects don't need a business case or referendum.
That's a thread in its own, though.
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I think the principles are as follows:
Intra-municipal bridges not on Provincial Highways are the responsibility of the municipality (Burrard, Granville, Cambie, No. 2 Rd., Dinsmore, etc)
(There may be historical ownership factors at play as well, as Granville Bridge is, I think, also Hwy 99)
Inter-municipal bridges not on Provincial Highways were handed to TransLink (in place of a city to city negotiation between the 2 connected cities, the regional level of government steps in. TransLink is that regional level of government for transportation matters.
(Patullo, Golden Ears; Rieffel Island Bridge is an oddball exception, as it's all in Delta, isn't it?)
Bridges on Provincial Highways are the responsibility of the Province of BC (regardless of whether they are intra- or inter- municipal).
(i.e. intra-municipal Provincial bridges - Hwy 1 bridges in North Vancouver, serpentine River in Surrey; inter-municipal Provincial Bridges - Port Mann, GMT, Oak St., Lions Gate, 2nd Narrows)