John Tory's Incredibly Disappearing Ghost-Track Transit Plan

Anbarandy

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Apr 27, 2006
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Mayor John Tory’s SmartTrack plan loses another two stations
Ben Spurr

By Ben SpurrTransportation Reporter
Wed., Jan. 20, 2021



Mayor John Tory’s signature transit plan shrunk again on Wednesday, when a new city report revealed two stations have to be dropped from his SmartTrack program because they conflict with provincial subway projects.

The development means the latest iteration of the mayor’s plan will proceed with just five new stops on existing GO corridors, one of which will have no direct connection to the others. According to the report, the stops will be operational by 2026.

That’s a far cry from Tory’s original proposal during his successful 2014 mayoral campaign, when he said SmartTrack would be a “surface subway” with 15 new stations that would open this year.


At a news conference at city hall, Tory acknowledged the plan had changed but said it would still provide much needed new transit to Toronto, and would be done years before other major projects that won’t be finished until at least a decade from now.

“Yes it’s different, yes it’s happening at a different time, but it’s happening and I’m going to make sure it does happen,” he said.


The two SmartTrack stations being deleted are Lawrence-Kennedy and Gerrard-Carlaw. According to the report, which will be debated at Tory’s executive committee on Jan. 27, the stops have been made redundant by the province’s plans to build new stations near the same locations for the three-stop Scarborough subway extension and the Ontario Line, respectively.


Despite the two stations being removed, the city’s capital costs for SmartTrack would remain unchanged at $1.46 billion. That’s in part because a planned new GO station at Lansdowne-Bloor would be added to the program and its construction paid for by the city. The province had previously planned to pay for the Lansdowne stop.


The Lansdowne station would be located on the Barrie GO corridor and wouldn’t have a direct link to the other five SmartTrack stops, which would be on GO’s Kitchener and Lakeshore East/Stouffville corridors. That means that unlike previous versions of the plan, it would be impossible for one train to service all SmartTrack stops in a single trip.


SmartTrack is being built under a wider expansion of GO Transit being led by Metrolinx, the provincial transit agency. SmartTrack stations would be served by GO trains, which would also stop at existing and new GO stations within Toronto that haven’t been given the “SmartTrack” label. While SmartTrack stations would be paid for by the city, they would be owned and operated by the province.

As the plan has been whittled down from the version that helped Tory clinch the mayoralty seven years ago, critics say SmartTrack has been revealed to be little more than a political marketing exercise that will allow the mayor to say he kept his promise, but has put the city on the hook for funding provincial GO stations that have been renamed as “SmartTrack” stops.


SmartTrack is “now a brand without a product,” charged Councillor Gord Perks (Ward 4, Parkdale-High Park). He said the new stations would be more useful to GO riders coming from outside Toronto than to local transit users, and the budget for SmartTrack would be better spent improving the city-owned TTC.

“I don’t understand why we’re calling parts of the provincial transit system ‘SmartTrack.’ But it sure isn’t what John Tory promised, and it sure isn’t what the city of Toronto needs,” Perks said.


In addition to Lansdowne, the other stations being pursued under the latest version of SmartTrack are Finch-Kennedy, King-Liberty, St. Clair-Old Weston, and East Harbour.


 

bigdickdean

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May 25, 2017
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Mayor John Tory’s SmartTrack plan loses another two stations
Ben Spurr

By Ben SpurrTransportation Reporter
Wed., Jan. 20, 2021



Mayor John Tory’s signature transit plan shrunk again on Wednesday, when a new city report revealed two stations have to be dropped from his SmartTrack program because they conflict with provincial subway projects.

The development means the latest iteration of the mayor’s plan will proceed with just five new stops on existing GO corridors, one of which will have no direct connection to the others. According to the report, the stops will be operational by 2026.

That’s a far cry from Tory’s original proposal during his successful 2014 mayoral campaign, when he said SmartTrack would be a “surface subway” with 15 new stations that would open this year.


At a news conference at city hall, Tory acknowledged the plan had changed but said it would still provide much needed new transit to Toronto, and would be done years before other major projects that won’t be finished until at least a decade from now.

“Yes it’s different, yes it’s happening at a different time, but it’s happening and I’m going to make sure it does happen,” he said.


The two SmartTrack stations being deleted are Lawrence-Kennedy and Gerrard-Carlaw. According to the report, which will be debated at Tory’s executive committee on Jan. 27, the stops have been made redundant by the province’s plans to build new stations near the same locations for the three-stop Scarborough subway extension and the Ontario Line, respectively.


Despite the two stations being removed, the city’s capital costs for SmartTrack would remain unchanged at $1.46 billion. That’s in part because a planned new GO station at Lansdowne-Bloor would be added to the program and its construction paid for by the city. The province had previously planned to pay for the Lansdowne stop.


The Lansdowne station would be located on the Barrie GO corridor and wouldn’t have a direct link to the other five SmartTrack stops, which would be on GO’s Kitchener and Lakeshore East/Stouffville corridors. That means that unlike previous versions of the plan, it would be impossible for one train to service all SmartTrack stops in a single trip.


SmartTrack is being built under a wider expansion of GO Transit being led by Metrolinx, the provincial transit agency. SmartTrack stations would be served by GO trains, which would also stop at existing and new GO stations within Toronto that haven’t been given the “SmartTrack” label. While SmartTrack stations would be paid for by the city, they would be owned and operated by the province.

As the plan has been whittled down from the version that helped Tory clinch the mayoralty seven years ago, critics say SmartTrack has been revealed to be little more than a political marketing exercise that will allow the mayor to say he kept his promise, but has put the city on the hook for funding provincial GO stations that have been renamed as “SmartTrack” stops.


SmartTrack is “now a brand without a product,” charged Councillor Gord Perks (Ward 4, Parkdale-High Park). He said the new stations would be more useful to GO riders coming from outside Toronto than to local transit users, and the budget for SmartTrack would be better spent improving the city-owned TTC.

“I don’t understand why we’re calling parts of the provincial transit system ‘SmartTrack.’ But it sure isn’t what John Tory promised, and it sure isn’t what the city of Toronto needs,” Perks said.


In addition to Lansdowne, the other stations being pursued under the latest version of SmartTrack are Finch-Kennedy, King-Liberty, St. Clair-Old Weston, and East Harbour.

Another plan that is never going to happen.
 

Anbarandy

Bitter House****
Apr 27, 2006
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Oh, it will happen but as just a slim and shady shadow of what John Tory originally and disingenuously proclaimed as his shining bauble to solve all of Toronto's commuting problems during the 2014 election campaign.

From the 15 shiny new stations now down to 5 measly piggy-back, hinterland outposts.

From "The Jetsons" speed 2021 completion date, now up to "The Flintstones" reality of 2026.

From a measly $100million 'a pop' station to a $300 million "a Scud Dud" flop.
 

Frankfooter

dangling member
Apr 10, 2015
92,344
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Oh, it will happen but as just a slim and shady shadow of what John Tory originally and disingenuously proclaimed as his shining bauble to solve all of Toronto's commuting problems during the 2014 election campaign.

From the 15 shiny new stations now down to 5 measly piggy-back, hinterland outposts.

From "The Jetsons" speed 2021 completion date, now up to "The Flintstones" reality of 2026.

From a measly $100million 'a pop' station to a $300 million "a Scud Dud" flop.
Not as bad as the crackhead, but not its not good either.
It just makes David Miller's plan look smarter and smarter every year and the Ford's that much worse for cancelling it.
 

james t kirk

Well-known member
Aug 17, 2001
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There is really only 1 railway corridor in Toronto that I can think of that would be possible for an at grade subway. (Because it currently exists AND it is abandoned.)

That is the Metrolinx owned lower Belleville subdivision that runs from Union Station to the CPR Leaside yard. (I think they call it the Lower Don branch now.)

And it's a pretty good north south route too.

It was originally built by the CPR way back when to carry CPR rail traffic from CPR's Belleville Subdivision which runs from Smiths Falls Ontario to Union Station. From Union Station, you can connect to the CPR Galt subdivision which runs northwest out of Union Station. But the Galt sub currently has traffic on it (I believe it is part of the Metrolinx line to Georgetown, but don't quote me no it.)

Anyway, the lower Don Branch is still there, but hasn't been used in 20 years or more. You probably see the "half mile bridge" on it all the time from the DVP around the Bloor Street street ramp to the DVP. (The track runs on the east side of the Don River under the Bloor Viaduct.) Mx bought it with the intention of maybe one day running service to Peterborough.

I've often thought that Mx and the City could connect the line that carries the UP express (which runs from the airport on the former CNR Weston subdivision to Union Station) to the currently abandoned Lower Don branch and it would make an excellent at grade subway.

Right now the UP Express just goes back and forth between the airport and Union Station. But imagine if you replace the existing UP cars with a subway. Add stations along the UP line (right now, I think there's only Weston and Bloor), so add Eglinton, St. Clair, Queen, King, etc on the current UP Express line, then as you connect into the Lower Don Branch at Union Station, instead of just heading back to the airport you keep going east then turn north. You could add stations at Jarvis, Cherry, Eastern Avenue, King, Queen, Dundas East, Gerrard, Bloor East and so on. Essentially a big U shaped track.

You may recognize the abandoned bridge over the Don Valley at the DVP ramp I'm referring to.

An interesting read about the Lower Don Branch here.
 
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Frankfooter

dangling member
Apr 10, 2015
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There is really only 1 railway corridor in Toronto that I can think of that would be possible for an at grade subway. (Because it currently exists AND it is abandonned.)

That is the Metrolinx owned lower Belleville subdivision that runs from Union Station to the CPR Leaside yard. (I think they call it the Lower Don branch now.)

And it's a pretty good north south route too.

It was originally built by the CPR way back when to carry CPR rail traffic from CPR's Belleville Subdivision which runs from Smiths Falls to Union Station. From Union Station, you can connect to the CPR Galt subdivision which runs west out of Union Station. But the Galt sub currently has traffic on it (I believe it is part of the Metrolinx line to Georgetown, but don't quote me no it.)

Anyway, the lower Don Branch is still there, but hasn't been used in 20 years or more. You probably see the "half mile bridge" it all the time from the DVP around the Bloor Street street ramp to the DVP. (The track runs on the east side of the Don River under the Bloor Viaduct.) Mx bought it with the intention of maybe one day running service to Peterborough.

I've often thought that Mx and the City could connect the line that carries the UP express (which runs from the airport on the former CNR Weston subdivision to Union Station to currently abandoned Lower Don branch and make an excellent at grade subway.

Right now the UP Express just goes back and forth between the airport and Union Station. But imagine if you replace the existing UP cars with a subway. Add stations along the UP line (right now, I think there's only Weston and Bloor), so add Eglinton, St. Clair, Queen, King, etc on the current loop, then as you connect into the Lower Don Branch at Union Station, instead of just heading back to the airport you keep going east then turn north. You could add Jarvis, Cherry, Eastern Avenue, King, Queen, Dundas East, Gerrard, Bloor East and so on. Essentially a big U shaped track.

You may recognize the abandoned bridge over the Don Valley at the DVP ramp I'm referring to.

An interesting read about the Lower Don Branch here.
Thanks, I didn't know about that line at all.
Would be a really useful route but it would also be very unpopular to try to make that line active through the Don Valley these days.

 
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