Title: Role of Transportation in Greater Golden Horseshoe
1Ministry of Transportation
Role of Transportation in Greater Golden
Horseshoe Growth Plan and Watershed Protection
Great Lakes Commission Annual Meeting
October 5, 2004
2Greater Golden Horseshoe
- One of fastest growing regions in North America
- Population to grow by almost 4 million people by
2031 compared to 7.8 million in 2001 - Receives about half of all immigrants to Canada
- Economic engine for Ontario and Canada
- Economy will grow by almost 2 million jobs by 2031
3Greater Golden Horseshoe Area
4Ontario Developing a New 30 Year Growth Plan
- Identifying Priority Growth Areas
- Strengthening transportation linkages between
them - Encouraging more compact development
- Protecting and Managing Natural Systems including
Key Watersheds as well as - Greenlands
- Agricultural lands
- Using Available Tools to Implement These
Objectives - Invest strategically in infrastructure including
for transportation - Planning Framework
- Regulatory and Fiscal Tools
5Prioriity and Emerging Growth Areas Conceptual
Map
6Natural Heritage Features/Source Water Protection
- Greater Golden Horseshoe contains many
significant natural heritage features including
including wetlands, kettle lakes, rivers and
valleys, Lake Ontario waterfront, the Niagara
Escarpment and Oak Ridges Moraine - These form part of the linked system of surface
and groundwater features such as aquifers,
headwaters, rivers, stream channels, lakes,
recharge and discharge areas, springs and
wetlands that are essential in sustaining and
replenishing Ontarios water resources.
7Natural Heritage Features
8Protecting Water Resources
- Promoting integrated and co-ordinated approach to
growth, source water protection and
infrastructure planning within specific surface
or ground watersheds - Requiring municipalities to take into
consideration long-term impacts of growth and
infrastructure needs when developing
watershed-based source water protection plans - Directing development away from sensitive areas
as identified in source protection plans - Regularly assessing impacts of land-use change on
water quality, water quantity and related
hydrological functions
9Infrastructure to Support Growth Plan
- Infrastructure decisions on transit and
transportation as well as water and wastewater
pipes, hospitals, schools, cultural institutions,
energy facilities, transmission lines, and waste
facilities help determine growth patterns - help direct development away from sensitive areas
such as Oak Ridges Moraine - To protect environment while reducing
infrastructure costs, infrastructure investment
should support pattern of development emphasizing
compact urban form - reduces pressure to develop in environmentally
sensitive areas while optimizing use of existing
urban areas to minimize additional impacts such
as stormwater run-off, etc. - Transit priority investment for moving people
through urbanized parts of region - Also need to invest in trade corridors to move
people and goods long distances and to border
crossings - rail, highway, marine play key roles in
trading/tourism economies - planned properly to avoid sprawl/minimize
environmental impacts
10A Transportation Vision for the Greater Golden
Horseshoe
- An integrated transportation network that
supports the objectives of the Greater Golden
Horseshoe Growth Plan. - Objectives
- Connect the people living and working in the
GTA communities - Connect the GTA with vital markets in the U.S
and Canada - Increase public transit ridership
- Manage congestion
- Reduce average commute times.
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11Key Transportation Strategies
- To achieve the objectives of the Growth Plan,
transportation strategies are needed to - Set out a future interregional transportation
network that is integrated and interconnected - Focus on transit as the first priority for moving
people in the urban centres - Link priority growth and emerging urban centres
and future growth areas through integrated
transportation networks - Identify critical infrastructure investments
required to support the priority areas - Invest strategically in key trade corridors to
support the economic competitiveness of the
region and - Identify new economic corridors that will be
needed over the long term.
12Moving People by Transit
- Enhancing Transit in Urbanized Areas
- Invest in enhancements to rapid transit in
urbanized communities - Build strong links between transit friendly land
use and rapid transit systems - Developing high density transit corridors along
key routes in Toronto - Extensions of the subway system
- New urban transit systems in urbanizing areas
- Establish New Inter-Regional Transit Services
- Establish grid of interconnected transit
corridors, east-west/north-south across GTA - The 407 Transitway as primary inter-regional
transit spine. - Buses on roads and highways, gradually becoming
more intensive as demand warrants, ultimately
moving to rail based transit - Transit priority measures
- All transit GO Transit, local transit operators
or intercity bus companies
13Moving People by Transit / HOV
- 3. Strengthen the GO Transit Commuter Rail System
- New tracks on Lakeshore corridor
- All-day, two-way service on all corridors
- Extending service northward to existing urban
centre of Barrie - New services on additional corridors extending
existing corridors where warranted - Adding rolling stock, maintenance and storage
facilities - Upgrade Union Station in Downtown Toronto
- Build a Network of High Occupancy Vehicle Lanes
- Establish a network of HOV lanes on strategic
provincial highways for inter-regional transit
usage and to increase occupancy in vehicles - Develop partnerships for an integrated network of
HOV lanes - Identify future needs for network wide carpool
lots - Develop information systems to allow carpoolers
to connect
14Moving People by Transit / HOV
15Moving Goods
- Key elements
- highway network
- mainline rail corridors
- intermodal facilities
- main shipping ports of Hamilton and Toronto
- main airports in Toronto and Hamilton
- border crossings in Niagara in addition to
Windsor Sarnia - Strategies
- 1. Invest in the Strategic Goods Movement
Network - Direct investments to priority bottlenecks on the
strategic network - Ensure ready access between intermodal facilities
and highways - Relieve congestion at hot spots through
capacity improvements - Deploy intelligent transportation systems
- 2. Future Economic Corridors
- Planning needed to lay out future corridors now
- Needs to be done differently than in past limit
location of interchanges, plan for multi-purpose
corridors, take best practices approach to
environmental standards
16Moving Goods
17Transportation investments Critical to Growth Plan
- Transportation and transit infrastructure
critical to fulfilling growth plan objectives - Priority and emerging growth centres supported by
these transportation investments to improve
environment, connectivity and livability