The
headline on the government's news release reads: "Premier
Launches Gateway Transportation Program". "Launches"
is a bit of an exaggeration given the history of the Gateway
Program. Those whose memories go back over the last 15 years
will recall that the components of the Gateway Plan were
pet projects advocated by Glen Clark, although the Harcourt
government was less enthusiastic.
The
issues are what the completion dates will be and precisely
what will be delivered by those dates. It appears that the
Campbell government has abandoned the Livable Region Plan
and wants to increase supply rather than rely on demand
management strategies; it has accepted reliance on the private
single-occupant automobile, SUV or "passenger-truck".
The
covering letter on the 1993 report of the "Transport
2021" steering committee was addressed to Art Charbonneau,
then Minister of Transportation, and Gordon Campbell, then
GVRD chairperson. The executive summary to that report stated:
The
news release for the latest incarnation of the Gateway Program
says that Premier Gordon Campbell unveiled a comprehensive
$3-billion plan. Isn't it interesting how governments can
put precise price tags on mega-projects when they can't
produce a single engineering study or map that shows what
changes will be made at the ends of the Port Mann Bridge,
whose homes will be confiscated to build the project and
which neighbourhoods will be affected. The government handled
that challenge on the Sea-to-Sky improvement project by
offering a fixed price and asking contractors what they
could build for the specified cost. That can work when the
specified cost exceeds the minimum required for the project,
but if the budget proves inadequate either it has to be
increased or the tolls have to be increased. The trial balloon
suggests a toll of $2.50; media reports indicate that is
one way, not round trip. What will happen to those without
transponders who obscure their license plates with devices
designed to foil red light cameras? Details like that should
be flushed out before contracts are let and construction
begins.
If anyone
thinks the "launch" is a sign that the project
is any closer to completion than it was as a gleam in Glen
Clark's eye, notice that it begins with 18 months of community
consultation. That will take us to July 2007, less than
two years from the May 2009 provincial election. Unless
the engineering work happens concurrently with the public
consultation, something that would expose the consultation
as a sham, it could easily take another two years before
rough costs could be estimated.
Stay
tuned for opponents of freeways to object on principle to
any plan that favors automobiles over transit. Those opponents
might strengthen their opposition by simply asking for the
details that are not available on the new Gateway
Program website, where clicking on the link for Port
Mann Bridge Reports produces the note "[coming soon
]".