smably
Senior Member
It makes good sense for the province to pay the costs associated with the Gardiner and DVP, considering that 40% of trips are non-Toronto residents. The financial relief is welcome, but I'm less optimistic about the impacts of putting an urban highway under the purview of the MTO, which often acts as if pedestrians and cyclists don't exist, e.g.,:
I can pretty much guarantee that Love Park wouldn't exist if the province had owned the Gardiner.In Scarborough, the city installed excellent bike lanes on Conlins Road, an important crossing that links the Meadoway with University of Toronto’s Scarborough campus. However, the separated lanes, protected with concrete barriers, end when Conlins crosses the 401 as the MTO would not let the city protect the lanes there. There aren’t even any on- or off-ramps here but the MTO’s one-size-fits-all approach still applies.
Further east, at the Sheppard Avenue and Port Union Road crossing, the city will be installing separated lanes on either side of the 401, but not over it, because of the MTO.
Avenue Road was indeed recently redone, with some extra space that can barely be considered a bike lane between the curb and edge lines — nothing like proper lanes the city of Toronto would create. But even these all end abruptly at the highway ramps and there are four “Cyclists Dismount” signs posted. The MTO also prioritized a concrete median to protect the cars from each other — not pedestrians and cyclists.