Gardiner takedown study approved by budget committee - Action News
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Toronto

Gardiner takedown study approved by budget committee

Toronto council's budget committee has voted in favour of restarting a shelved environmental assessment of the possible dismantling of an eastern portion of the Gardiner Expressway.
The study will examine several options about what to do with the Gardiner Expressway. (CBC)

Toronto council'sbudget committee has voted in favour of restarting a shelvedenvironmental assessment ofthe possible dismantling of an eastern portion of the Gardiner Expressway.

Coun. Mike Del Grande, the chair of the city's budget committee, introduced the motion Tuesdayto take up the study into tearing down a stretch of the highway east of Jarvis Street. The original environmental assessment was abandoned in 2011.

"How much money do you spend on it without really analyzing or understanding whether it should stay up, should it stay down, should it be repaired, what should be done?" said Del Grande, who personally favours keeping the stretch of expressway intact.

"But to do nothing would be criminal."

The study would examine several options for the "takedown" of the Gardiner, a partially-elevatedhighway that was completed in 1965 and carries up to 200,000 vehicles per weekday. Staff estimate it would be six to nine years before dismantling can commence.

The committee voted in favour of the move to study options for the aging expressway amid heightened concerns about its safety and usability. A final vote in council is required before the study can be started.

City staff said as recently as Decemberthat the eastern portion of the expresswaymay not be fit for use within six years if repairs aren't carried out on the road surface.

Just keeping it operational in that time would cost at least $30 million to $35 million, not including additional millions for reinforcing the roadway. Moreover, the city has proposedspending an additional $505 million in repairsover the next 10 years to keep the Gardiner in good repair.

City staff have given increased scrutiny to the Gardiner in the wake of several incidents in whichconcrete fell from the structure and on to the roadway below.

Staff note provides new details on fate of study

Themaintenance costs of the expressway contributed in part to the decision in July 2008 by the administration of former Mayor David Miller to start theenvironmental assessment.

Buttop bureaucrats from the city and Waterfront Toronto decided to put a hold on the assessment in Nov. 2010 after Mayor Rob Ford was elected"pending direction from the newcouncil and administration," according to a staff briefing note released Tuesday.

Current public works and infrastructure committee chair Denzil Minnan-Wong then askedstaff in March 2011 for a letter for him to introduce in committee to request a report on the effects of modifying the terms of the environmental assessment.

But when he was given the letter, he never tabled it, the briefing note said.

Sometime that year, $4.41 millionin unused funds of the $7.69 million study was dedicated to other projects by Waterfront Toronto.