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January 2001 Newsletter

Fear of Alternatives

Terry Cooke says somebody else has to come up with an alternative to locating an expressway in the Red Hill Valley. This is the same fellow who has just spent $2 million lawyers and lobbyists to try and prevent the examination of alternatives in a federal environmental assessment. Cooke's comments were part of a full page interview published in the Hamilton Spectator on January 3. The relevant portion is reprinted at the end of this article.

The reality is that the regional government last looked at "alternatives" in 1979 and has repeated refused to re-examine this issue, despite several efforts by the provincial government. In 1990, the provincial NDP government announced it wouldn't fund a valley route and asked for a new investigation of alternative routes. The region responded by going to court (unsuccessfully) and then adamantly refusing to consider any non-valley options. In 1993 the province tried to break the deadlock by appointing a former conservative cabinet minister, David Crombie, as an honest broker. Crombie hired professional transportation planners who concluded that no expressway is needed and all foreseeable traffic needs could be met by adding two lanes to an existing escarpment crossing (Mt. Albion) and linking this to an existing four-lane road (Woodward Avenue). The following year, an independent provincial transportation enquiry (Transfocus 2021) determined that Highway 20 could be widened to six lanes between Mud Street and the QEW for $33 million (about one-sixth the cost of the proposed valley expressway). The study noted that the right-of-ways for this widening were already in public hands and that no property would need to be acquired for the widening.

How did Mr. Cooke and the Regional Council respond? They rejected the Crombie road as "too slow" and ignored the Transfocus study. The following year (1995) they initiated a major regional transportation planning exercise to create a new Regional Transportation Plan. They instructed the planners to ASSUME that an expressway would be constructed in the Red Hill Valley. There was no investigation of any alternatives.

In the past three years, local government dug its head further into the sand on the issue of alternatives. In the first place, they connected the four-lane Lincoln Alexander with the four-lane Mud Street by way of a TWO-LANE roadway that cannot be widened without tearing down two overpasses. Then they turned down a staff recommendation to widen Highway 20 between King Street and Queenston Road, and instead installed street lights, sidewalks and various decorative walls on this roadway to make it more difficult and expensive to widen it in the future. And finally, they went to court and wasted $2 million on lawyers and lobbyists in an attempt to prevent the federal assessment from examining alternatives.


EXCERPT FROM THE SPECTATOR INTERVIEW

SPECTATOR: The federal court will soon rule on the region's case on the Red Hill Creek Expressway; the region wants to end the federal environmental assessment. How likely is it that this road is ever going to be built?

COOKE: I think it will be built. The question will be at what cost and in what duration.

SPECTATOR: Why does it have to be that route?

COOKE: In the absence of somebody coming along and showing us how we're going to meet the transportation capacity needs of the region in a way that doesn't fundamentally affect whole communities or environmentally sensitive areas — and I certainly haven't seen anybody bring that alternative forward — we have exhausted the landscape in searching (for other possible routes).

SPECTATOR: From a practical perspective, why are all the other routes unworkable? Why couldn't you just bring it down the hill somewhere else?
COOKE: Because there is no easy somewhere else. I mean, we have a largely urbanized area. All of them will impact upon the natural configuration of the Niagara Escarpment and all of them will face considerable community impact. And I guess the question is ... at some point, people of good will say the democratic process has run its course. The thing is two-thirds completed, and it's time that people accepted that the decision has been legitimately taken.

SPECTATOR: What if the region loses the court case and the environmental assessment goes against it?

COOKE: Then I think the new council is going to have to step back and decide how it wants to proceed. I will say this: I think at that point the onus on the federal government and (Hamilton cabinet minister) Sheila Copps to not just criticize and obstruct, but in fact to provide a viable alternative, is going to get pretty intense.

SPECTATOR: Despite all of the economic arguments made, how do you feel about the loss of what will be lost?

COOKE: Fred, you mentioned the Chedoke Expressway, the 403, earlier. There's no question that there was environmental impact that has been largely mitigated. But in the absence of this corridor in west Hamilton, it would have made it impossible to function in this urban community. All of the same considerations were there at the time. It impacted on the Chedoke Creek Valley; it impacted on the Chedoke Golf Course; it affected neighbourhoods. But ultimately it was a necessity in terms of developing this urban area.

SPECTATOR: So you don't feel some sense of loss for the Red Hill Creek Valley?

COOKE: Do I have some reservations any time we touch an area that is environmentally sensitive? Of course I do. Is it an acceptable tradeoff in terms of the impact on the community's life? I believe conscientiously that it is, and I also accept that there will be some that will never accept that judgment. That is part of life in a democracy. "


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