Crown takes over to build link to Pearson airport
Published: July 31st 2010
Source:
National Post
A provincial Crown corporation will
assume responsibility for the construction of a rail link between Union Station
and Pearson airport after a private company pulled out on Friday.
Montreal-based SNC-Lavalin, which has been involved with the project since
November 2003, said on Friday it is abandoning the project for financial
reasons.
“The lending community is not prepared at this time to fund full revenue-risk
projects,” SNC spokeswoman Dominique Morval said in an email. “When there are so
many other infrastructure projects that are proceeding at this time, the banks
are not interested in projects without a fixed income stream.”
The provincially owned Metrolinx, which already runs GO Transit, is now in
charge of the project, which means Ontario taxpayers will be stuck with the
bill.
“The taxpayer may be paying the brunt up front, but they’ll get the return,”
said Robert Prichard, president and CEO of Metrolinx. “We believe it will be a
successful venture, delivering a great service to travelers and recovering its
costs from the revenue we receive.”
“There always was provincial money involved,” said Kathleen Wynne, provincial
Minister of Transportation. “As SNC-Lavalin has said, we’re disappointed that it
didn’t work out.
“Metrolinx will have the flexibility to maximize ridership and minimize costs,”
Ms. Wynne said. “I think this is the right decision.”
The project’s $300-million price tag is lower than SNC-Lavalin’s estimate, Mr.
Prichard said. He said Metrolinx will save money because it has infrastructure
SNC-Lavalin would have had to build, such as a maintenance yard.
Metrolinx says the rail link will still be up and running by the 2015 deadline —
a stipulation of Toronto’s winning bid for the 2015 Pan Am Games, but that
doesn’t mean everybody is satisfied.
Many residents in the city’s west end have expressed concern over the use of
diesel trains.
“We don’t even think this deadline of 2015 can justify running diesel trains
through west Toronto,” said Keith Brooks, spokesman for the Clean Train
Coalition, a grassroots organization that opposes the use of diesel trains in
residential areas.
Residents in the area favour electric trains instead, something both the
provincial government and Metrolinx say is being researched. A report on the
feasibility of not only electrifying the airport link, but the entire GO system,
will be released in December, Mr. Prichard said.
“As the green Games, it should be a green train,” Mr. Brooks said, referring to
the 2015 Pan Am Games’ designation as the most environmentally friendly Games to
date.
Metrolinx and the ministry both say they are continuing to explore the option of
electrification and that they will release a report on the subject in December
2010. However, Mr. Brooks said this report is about electrifying the entire GO
Transit system.
“It’s actually a waste of our taxpayers’ dollars. It’s $4-million being spent on
this study.”
The report’s recommendations will be non-binding and, regardless of its outcome,
Metrolinx is designing the system so it can be converted to electric later on.
“On opening day they will be Tier 4 diesel trains, but we call them shuttles,”
Mr. Prichard said.
“Once you’ve got diesel trains, how quickly are they going to shifted to
electric?” Mr. Brooks challenged.
Nevertheless, he is hopeful.
“The province and Metrolinx should be much more accountable to the public than
SNC-Lavalin would have been.”
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