Municipal transit systems get more funding through change to Ontario gasoline tax program - Action News
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Thunder Bay

Municipal transit systems get more funding through change to Ontario gasoline tax program

The Ontario government plans to increase funding for many community transit systems by doubling the municipal share of the gas tax program from two cents per litre to four cents by 2021, Bill Mauro, the MPP for Thunder Bay-Atikokan announced Wednesday.

Money to be used to buy new buses, extend service, update fare system

This brightly painted bus in Thunder Bay is part of the city's mass transit system, which is set to get more money through an enhancement to Ontario's gas tax program. (Heather Kitching/CBC)

The Ontario government plans to increase funding for many community transit systems by doubling the municipal share of the gas tax program from two cents per litre to four cents by 2021, Bill Mauro, the MPP for Thunder Bay-Atikokan announced Wednesday.

For example, this means by 2021 the city of Thunder Bay will have $3.6-million to spend on a variety of mass transit initiatives.

Thunder Bay-Atikokan Liberal MPP Bill Mauro says this new funding will help the city's economy and transit system. (Supplied)

"This funding will also assist in continuing to build up our local economy, as well as contribute to the overall well-being of people in our community," said Mauro in a written release.

He also believes it will help take some of the pressures off municipalities at budget time.

"From my days on council I can remember that a bus at that time [about 15 years ago] was somewhere in the neighbourhood of $400,000 so some of that budget pressure is relieved and it creates some room for them to do other things or to do the same things at the same tax rate," he said.

New buses, extended service, improve shelters

This provincial funding dovetails with federal infrastructure money and will allow the transit department to do some strategic planning, said Brad Loroff, the manager of transit for the city of Thunder Bay.

His department will be able to buy new buses, and improve or extend service on many routes, as well as investigating "new electronic fare management systems, smart card systems, new fare boxes as well as infrastructure improvements to bus stops and transfer points where buses connect so it would allow us an opportunity to take a broader look at improving transit service overall for people," he said.

Brad Loroff, the transit manager for the city of Thunder Bay, says this new funding from the Ontario government will help the municipality buy more buses and improve the overall service. (Cathy Alex/CBC)

One bus takes up to 40 vehicles off the road, and keeps 25 tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions out of the atmosphere each year, the news release stated.

There will be no increase in the tax that people in Ontario pay on gasoline as a result of the enhancement to the program, said Mauro, although the price at the pumps is expected to rise due to recent carbon tax legislation.