Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Premier Hints At Twin-Tunnel Plan For Metro Vancouver's Massey Tunnel

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 May, 2019 09:29 PM

    SURREY, B.C. — Premier John Horgan says a twin-tunnel proposal for a major Metro Vancouver traffic bottleneck will get serious consideration from his government.

     

    Horgan says Metro Vancouver mayors now appear united in their support for a plan to reduce traffic congestion at the current George Massey Tunnel on Highway 99 under the Fraser River.


    Horgan says the mayor's proposal is less costly, faster to build and would not require tolls.


    The B.C. government cancelled plans for a 10-lane bridge to replace the 60-year-old tunnel shortly after it took office, saying it was the wrong project and communities didn't want the bridge.


    Horgan says the treasury board will examine the cost of the twin project and the province will go back to the federal government to ask for funding.


    The mayors of Delta, Richmond, Surrey, Vancouver and White Rock along with the chiefs of the Musqueam and Tsawwassen First Nations wrote to the premier last month asking for action to resolve the "terrible bottleneck."


    The joint letter said the leaders agree that the project should include six lanes for regular traffic, two lanes for public transit and have access for enhanced rapid transit, with the potential to include high-speed rail.


    "We believe only tunnel options, including a cost-effective deep bored tunnel if possible, should be considered," the joint letter says.


    It says Transport Canada is accepting applications through the National Trade Corridors Fund for projects like this and the government should be taking advantage of the funding opportunity.


    Horgan told the news conference on Thursday that his government views the consensus among the leaders as an opportunity to move quickly on a replacement.


    "We have talked to the federal government who would not participate in the former Massey plan because there were tolls involved, so now that we have an opportunity to get a federal partner and we have unanimity at the Mayor's Council, I think there's every possibility that we can get started on this in a more timely way."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Woman Tells Winnipeg Murder Trial Drugs Blossomed Into Romance

    WINNIPEG — One of five women who lived with a man now accused of first-degree murder testified she met him buying methamphetamine but it soon turned romantic.

    Woman Tells Winnipeg Murder Trial Drugs Blossomed Into Romance

    Planned Back Burns Help Contain Aggressive Wildfire Near Osoyoos, B.C.

    Planned Back Burns Help Contain Aggressive Wildfire Near Osoyoos, B.C.
    OSOYOOS, B.C. — Crews say they are making good progress taming a wildfire that has prompted evacuation alerts for several properties in British Columbia's southern Okanagan.

    Planned Back Burns Help Contain Aggressive Wildfire Near Osoyoos, B.C.

    Sajjan Says He Supported Chief Of Defence Staff's Decision To Suspend Norman

    Sajjan told the House of Commons on Wednesday that the decision was Gen. Jonathan Vance's alone.

    Sajjan Says He Supported Chief Of Defence Staff's Decision To Suspend Norman

    Spooking Speeders: Prairie City Latest To Use Police Cut-Outs On Busy Roads

    LLOYDMINSTER, Alta. — Some new scarecrows are popping up on the Prairies, but these aren't meant for bluffing birds.

    Spooking Speeders: Prairie City Latest To Use Police Cut-Outs On Busy Roads

    Police Suspend Search For 29-Year-Old Man Who Went Missing On B.C. Beach

    Police Suspend Search For 29-Year-Old Man Who Went Missing On B.C. Beach
    SOOKE, B.C. — Police have suspended the search for a 29-year-old man who went missing on a beach in British Columbia.    

    Police Suspend Search For 29-Year-Old Man Who Went Missing On B.C. Beach

    Province Funds Project Angel In Fight Against Opioid Crisis In The Fraser Valley

    The Abbotsford Opioid Working Group received a grant from the Province of British Columbia to fund ‘Project Angel’, an initiative aimed at combatting the opioid crisis.

    Province Funds Project Angel In Fight Against Opioid Crisis In The Fraser Valley