Arthur Street truck ban would devastate local truck stop, staff says - Action News
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Arthur Street truck ban would devastate local truck stop, staff says

The city's plan to ban heavy trucks on Arthur Street will devastate a decades-old truck stop, its staff says.

It would take 650 more cars a day to replace Santorelli's truck business, its comptroller says

The viability of Santorelli's Truck Stop is in jeopardy if Thunder Bay city council approves new heavy truck routes through the city, the business's staff says. (Heather Kitching/CBC)

Staff who work at a decades-old truck stop along Arthur Street in Thunder Bay, Ont. say their business will be devastatedif city council passes a new by-law Mondayto limit truck traffic on city streets.

The by-law would barheavy trucksfrom several main thoroughfares, including routes such asArthur, Dawson Road and Oliver Road, partlydue to safety concerns and partlyto reduce the cost of repairing roads damaged by big rigs.

The comptroller of Santorelli's Truck Stop told CBC News, if the by-law passes,there's no way to compensate for the lost business.

"For every truck that does not come toSantorelli'sto fuel up, we need approximately 10 to 15 cars to replace them," Lorne Kellarsaid.

"So if you're talking 50 trucks, that means we need to have another 650 vehicles a day just to make us a viable enterprise," he continued.
Frank Morozzo, left, is Santorelli's' gas bar manager. Lorne Kellar, right, is the comptroller. If Thunder Bay restricts heavy truck traffic on Arthur Street, it will devastate Santorelli's' business, Kellar said. (Heather Kitching/CBC)

"Those numbers are not achievable."

When asked about the safety of allowing heavy trucks on Arthur Street, Kellar pointed to a 2014 city engineering report that documented only four accidents involving transport trucks on the street in the preceding decade.

The report looked at accidents from Highway 61 west to the city limits.

Santorelli's sits just outside the municipal border, but Kellar said he doubts many trucks will visit the 65-year-old business if they can no longer follow the route into town.

Kellar conceded that allowing heavy trucks on multiple routes does drive upmaintenance costs, but he said the primary beneficiaries are local truckers making deliveries to local businesses.

$75 more per load to use Harbour Expressway

"They're spending all of their paychecks in Thunder Bay," he said.

Restricting the rigs will also costthe city in other ways, he added, notably in the extra cost of delivering materials for city infrastructure projects in the south core.

Private enterprise will have to find ways to offset the additional charges too, he said.

"They've figured it out that it's an extra 38 minutes per-load to go to Resolute using the Harbour Expressway over Arthur Street," Kellar said, estimatingthe increased cost per load at about $75.
Santorelli's Truck Stop currently serves about 50 trucks a day, gas bar manager Frank Morozzo estimated. (Heather Kitching/CBC)

"If it costs Resolute more to bring their fiber to their mill, wouldn't that put them in the position to renegotiate what their property's worth, to pay less property tax?" gas bar manager Frank Morozzo added.

"If you managed [Resolute], what would you do?"

Asked ifSantorelli'shas contemplated relocating to the Harbour Expressway, Kellar answered, "Who's going to pay for that?"

"Does anybody have any idea what the cost would be?"