Burlington Gazette:
http://www.burlingtongazette.ca/john-street-terminal-to-say-for-now-bigger-issue-got-put-on-the-table-where-is-burlington-going-with-public-transit-council-doesnt-know John Street terminal to stay for now; bigger issue got put on the table: Where is Burlington going with public transit – council doesn’t know.
March 5, 2014
BURLINGTON, ON.
The John Street transit terminal will remain in place – for now. On a vote of 5-2 (Sharman, Dennison were prepared to let people stand out in the cold) The
city is currently looking at the matter of transit hubs – there are
four that are being avidly discussed – with the John Street location
seen as one of the more critical locations. The
Burlington GO station has more bus routes going through it – 16 as
opposed to the 8 that run through the John Street location. The Mayor sees it as a critical part of the downtown core.
There
was a time when a much larger bus terminal existed 25 yards to the left
of this small terminal on John Street – it was where people met. There
were fewer cars, Burlington didn’t have the wealth then that it has now.
We were a smaller city, as much rural as suburban. The times have
changed and transit now needs to change as well.
The transit people wanted to shut the terminal down
because the drivers wouldn’t need the facility and the public would be
able to get answers to their questions at the Harvester Road transit
office which is open longer than the terminal and has staff available on
Sunday. What Spicer kept calling “fare media” when he meant bus tickets, would be available at local retail locations in the downtown core. The
Queen’s Head and Coffee Culture are the closest retail locations that
are open long hours but Spicer told council that his people had not
approached anyone yet.
Were the terminal to be closed, tickets will be available at city hall – but the hours there are limited. What was startling was no mention whatsoever about customer comfort. In this brutally cold weather that has been with us for more than a month the outdoor shelters just don’t cut it. The terminal is a warm place to wait for a bus.
Mayor Rick Goldring said transit had to have a
meaningful presence in the downtown core and added that he talks to a
lot of people who use the John Street terminal.
The Mayor and Meed Ward were the only two people to talk about the terminal. Meed
Ward then moved on to part two of her transit mission: where was
transit in the Transportation Master Plan review which has focused a bit
on the creation of four mobility hubs. Burlington’s friends and
supporters of transit (Bfast) couldn’t see it in the proceedings so far.
Mobility
hubs at the GO stations is close to a no brainer – it is the possible
hub in the downtown core that has yet to be thoroughly thought through.
Council decided that closing the terminal on John Street to save $8000 a
year was not a bright idea.
Meed Ward was the chair of the committee reviewing
budget submissions which means when she has a question she turns the
gavel over to her vice chair Paul Sharman who behaved like an enforcer
on a hockey team and appeared to feel his job was to keep the puck away
from Meed Ward and if she did get her hands on the thing – then his job
was to knock her down. It was particularly deplorable behaviour during which there was precious little respect shown. We have seen this kind of behaviour from Councillor Sharman in the past.
With the gavel in his hands Sharman challenged her right to bring a new matter to the committee meeting. The
Clerk ruled that Meed Ward could bring a new matter and given that
transit was being discussed and her matter was related to transit she
wanted to proceed.
What became clear during the discussion about the
John Street terminal is the difficulty the city is having with just what
it wants to do, will have to do and can afford in terms of public
transit.
The transit advocates maintain that the city had
not made it perfectly clear that transit was part of the Master
Transportation Plan the city is currently reviewing.
Doug
Brown, chair of Bfast – Burlington’s friends and supporters of transit,
can read a bus schedule better than most bookies can read the Racing
Guide. He meets with Susan Lewis a transit user. Doug Brown Bfast chair said he has been asking if
transit was being considered within the Transportation Master Plan and
hadn’t been given an answer. Last November Brown sent the following questions to everyone he felt was involved. He says he has yet to get an answer. Bfast wants to know:
The transit advocates maintain that the city had
not made it perfectly clear that transit was part of the Master
Transportation Plan the city is currently reviewing.
General Manager Scott Stewart put that dog to rest
when he made it perfectly clear that transit is a vital part of the
transportation thinking.
1)
Will the Transportation Master Plan (TMP) develop a comprehensive
long-term transit plan, including funding, to guide the growth of a
robust transit system?
2) Will the TMP fully analyze and assess all opportunities to minimize road and intersection widenings and the construction of additional parking facilities through investments in transit, active transportation, and Transportation Demand Management? 3) Will the TMP be evaluated against criteria demonstrating that implementation of the TMP will: a) meet the City’s own planning objectives (ROPA38 requirement to increase local transit to 11% modal split from current 2%); b) meet the objectives of the City’s Strategic Plan (walkable, liveable, inclusive communities; GHG reduction targets)
c)
will be environmentally and economically sustainable by determining all
costs and benefits of proposed transportation options
4) Will
the TMP look at successful measures in other cities (i.e. Portland,
Ottawa, Victoria) to increase transit and active transportation modes.
Meed Ward read these out at the budget meeting. Stewart said he wasn’t aware of the questions; Meed Ward said she would send them to him.
The discussion around what the transit issue really is was instructive. Burlington
is expected to increase the transit part of its modal split (that is
the number of people who use different forms of transportation) from 2%
to 11% by 2031 and that can only happen if transit ridership increases
by 10% each year.
Blend into that the fact that transit ridership was lower in 2013 than it was in 2012.
City manager Jeff Fielding points out that our
population is only going to grow by 1900 a year for the next ten years
and then asks: “Do you really think you are going to get a modal shift from 2% up to 11% in the next 20 years. I can’t see it, I really can’t see it and I’m a big transit supporter. There may be some other approaches we need to look at.”
Those views sum up the predicament and the challenge that transit faces.
That brought Meed Ward back into the conversation with a question for staff: “Can they tell us with some specificity how transit will be handled within the Transportation Master Plan?” Stewart was able to oblige her. Transit
will be part of the Transportation Master Plan discussions but there
will not be a transit business case coming out of the TMP.
Councillor Taylor was just as direct. He said we are not going to get new people to take transit. If
transit is to grow it will have to come from the existing population –
and that is going to mean changing our communities and intensifying. The one way you can change transit said Taylor is to make it more convenient for the users.
Those views sum up the predicament and the challenge that transit faces.
That brought Meed Ward back into the conversation with a question for staff: “Can they tell us with some specificity how transit will be handled within the Transportation Master Plan?” Stewart was able to oblige her. Transit
will be part of the Transportation Master Plan discussions but there
will not be a transit business case coming out of the TMP.
Stewart undertook to get answers to the Bfast questions; when, asked Meed Ward. Not in March, that’s for sure responded Stewart; probably in April or May.
Councillor Sharman was both direct and blunt. Burlington is a great city and a place where wealthy people want to live. Wealthy people have cars. No one moves to Burlington to get around using transit.
Transit is due to produce their first report card on how the service is doing in June. Add
to that the news that transit is currently working with the providers
of a technology that will give the transit managers real-time data on
who gets on and off a bus and exactly where this happens; data
Burlington Transit says is vital if they are to effectively allocate the
resources they have.
As the discussion was coming to a close Sharman, filling in as chair of the meeting, asked Meed Ward if she had a motion. No, she replied and I now want to withdraw the motion I might have had. She had made her point – transit was now very much on the table and a part of an upcoming agenda.
Viewpoints that were not known before were now public.The city does have a transit advisory committee –
problem with that committee is that it can’t manage to meet which
increases Stewart’s frustration level.Susan
Lewis a consistent transit user, she doesn’t drive, was asked to join
the Transit Advisory committee and headed downtown in January for a meeting. When
she got to city hall she and one other person were the only people in
the room; the meeting had been cancelled and not everyone was told.
Mayor Goldring and Councillor Meed Ward want clarity, the transit advocates want a clear policy commitment and better funding. The
city manager doesn’t want to provide that money because he doesn’t see
value in it and the bulk of this council don’t have a lot of time for
transit. They spent more time talking about the removal of snow.
There is one sliver of hope. The city manager is a transit supporter and he would very much like to have some bold ideas to work with. The Bfast people, who can be a bit pedantic at times, do know what moving people around on public transit is all about.
If Stewart does manage to get all the players in
the room he just might find that the Bfast people have a lot to offer;
he just has to manage the frustration that overcomes him on occasion. He might think in terms of making Bfast the transit advisory committee. It couldn’t be any worse than what he has now – and the transit staff would be well served to listen carefully to these people. More respect for each other would go a long way as well.
The discussion really wasn’t a budget issue; Meed Ward was pushing the rules, but she brought to the table a discussion that has been needed for some time. Councillors Lancaster and Dennison had nothing to say; it will be a long time before you see either of them on a bus.
One of the “big picture” tasks the city is working
on is opportunities to develop the north end of John Street where the
city owns a parking lot that abuts the plaza at the top of John Street.
The Carriage Gate group is expected to break ground soon on its medical
building, parking garage and apartment/condo tower which will make the
Caroline and John Street part of town a busier place.
Medica
One or the Carriage Gate project – pick the name you like best – will
go up at the top of John Street and consist of a medical offices
building, an above ground garage and an apartment/condo complex. It will
bring significant change to the intersection and drive redevelopment of
the plaza to the immediate north, A transit hub a couple of blocks to
the south then makes a lot of sense.
Some of the city thinking has the plaza at the top
of John Street being given a massive make over and that portion of John
Street north of Caroline a cleanup – it looks more like a laneway right
now. All this thinking will
impact what happens at the south end of John, where just blocks away the
Delta Hotel and the Bridgewater condominiums are about to see some real
construction activity.
A John Street mobility hub then would be a critical part of any makeover of this part of town which is all very much a project that is in the thinking through the ramifications stage.
The Mayor wants to stay with this one; get in front of it and lead the parade.
Parking
lot # 3 at the top of John Street just south of the shopping plaza is
being given a very close look for redevelopment. The Carriage Gate
development will draw people to the area creating a John Street that
could undergo significant development. There might be life in the
downtown core yet.
2 comments to John Street terminal to stay for now; bigger issue got put on the table: Where is Burlington going with public transit – council doesn’t know. |
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Wednesday, 5 March 2014
John Street Terminal to Stay, For Now
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When is the last time the Mayor or council have taken the city bus? Serious question. How can they understand the issues without doing some homework on their own?
Sharman, again sounds so dumb. He is so out of his league to be an effective manager of city issues. Dolt.
As for the way Councillors treat each other – it is deplorable. Leadership comes from the top. I have felt for a long time that it is up to the Mayor to make certain that the councillors treat each other with respect. I have witnessed first hand the rude attitude that exists between some councillors. This should not be tolerated.
I hope that when October comes along that the residents look closely at the people running for office. Make choices not based on whether they think the person is a good person, but rather if the person is a good leader.