John Tory announces city will pay to finish some projects, but not others
John Tory said spending more to finish work on the Gardiner Expressway early is good, but spending more to add a granite sidewalk at Queen’s Quay may not be.
Toronto’s mayor announced Thursday, Dec. 18 the city will pay up to $2 million to finish work on a Gardiner section from the CNE grounds to Garrison Road in May.
Tory said he doesn’t think he’ll have to defend the decision because people, “to a point,” want congestion-producing construction projects sped up.
Finishing that part of the elevated Gardiner rehabilitation “as fast as we can within reason” – within 14 months instead of 16 – ensures all lanes will be open for the city’s Pan Am/Parapan Am Games next summer.
When the city has priorities, Tory told reporters, “we will find a way to do them and that’s what the budget process is all about.”
Though the mayor has suggested citizens wouldn’t mind paying a bit more to accelerate the pace of major roadwork, he takes a harsher tone on overspending for civic improvement projects.
Lately, he’s criticized Waterfront Toronto’s oversight of renovations at Queen’s Quay, which is also to be completed in time for the Games.
The Waterfront board decided to spend $4 million more on granite sidewalks – boosting their costs in the project up to $12 million and contributing to around $36 million in cost overruns.
Waterfront executives defended its spending on granite December 17 as being part of the project’s “design excellence.”
Tory said he understands circumstances can change, but said Waterfront, funded since 2000 by all three levels of government, had downplayed decisions made to use extra granite, “conscious decisions taken that dramatically increased the price.”
People are angry, he said, because, “these discussions have not taken place in a public setting and you find out after the fact.”
In an age of constrained resources, we have to do better, said Tory, though he also agreed Toronto’s once-neglected waterfront should be improved in an “excellent fashion.”
The mayor said he thinks Torontonians can be proud of Sugar Beach and Corktown Commons – parks produced by Waterfront Toronto which some city politicians criticized for their high costs – and yet seemed to question whether Waterfront “in its present incarnation” should be doing such projects at all.
“I think we have to have that discussion.”
The Games will have its own impact on traffic, and Tory said the city is trying to “minimize” the extensive network of allocated high-occupancy lanes reserved for the games, and who beside athletes and officials can use them.
He wants the Games to succeed, he said. “But they cannot be allowed to shut the city down in the meantime.”
http://www.insidetoronto.com/news-s...l-pay-to-finish-some-projects-but-not-others/
John Tory said spending more to finish work on the Gardiner Expressway early is good, but spending more to add a granite sidewalk at Queen’s Quay may not be.
Toronto’s mayor announced Thursday, Dec. 18 the city will pay up to $2 million to finish work on a Gardiner section from the CNE grounds to Garrison Road in May.
Tory said he doesn’t think he’ll have to defend the decision because people, “to a point,” want congestion-producing construction projects sped up.
Finishing that part of the elevated Gardiner rehabilitation “as fast as we can within reason” – within 14 months instead of 16 – ensures all lanes will be open for the city’s Pan Am/Parapan Am Games next summer.
When the city has priorities, Tory told reporters, “we will find a way to do them and that’s what the budget process is all about.”
Though the mayor has suggested citizens wouldn’t mind paying a bit more to accelerate the pace of major roadwork, he takes a harsher tone on overspending for civic improvement projects.
Lately, he’s criticized Waterfront Toronto’s oversight of renovations at Queen’s Quay, which is also to be completed in time for the Games.
The Waterfront board decided to spend $4 million more on granite sidewalks – boosting their costs in the project up to $12 million and contributing to around $36 million in cost overruns.
Waterfront executives defended its spending on granite December 17 as being part of the project’s “design excellence.”
Tory said he understands circumstances can change, but said Waterfront, funded since 2000 by all three levels of government, had downplayed decisions made to use extra granite, “conscious decisions taken that dramatically increased the price.”
People are angry, he said, because, “these discussions have not taken place in a public setting and you find out after the fact.”
In an age of constrained resources, we have to do better, said Tory, though he also agreed Toronto’s once-neglected waterfront should be improved in an “excellent fashion.”
The mayor said he thinks Torontonians can be proud of Sugar Beach and Corktown Commons – parks produced by Waterfront Toronto which some city politicians criticized for their high costs – and yet seemed to question whether Waterfront “in its present incarnation” should be doing such projects at all.
“I think we have to have that discussion.”
The Games will have its own impact on traffic, and Tory said the city is trying to “minimize” the extensive network of allocated high-occupancy lanes reserved for the games, and who beside athletes and officials can use them.
He wants the Games to succeed, he said. “But they cannot be allowed to shut the city down in the meantime.”
http://www.insidetoronto.com/news-s...l-pay-to-finish-some-projects-but-not-others/