Close X
Wednesday, January 8, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. Studies Bridge Option Between Gabriola Island And Vancouver Island

THE CANADIAN PRESS , 18 Sep, 2014 10:56 AM

    VICTORIA - Ferry service between Gabriola Island and Vancouver Island is so unreliable and expensive that it needs to be replaced by two bridges, says the man behind a petition that spurred a government feasibility study on the idea.

    Jeremy Baker, of the Gabriola Island Bridge Society, said the idea of a fixed link has been floated for 40 years and debated in the legislature but the time has now come to make it happen.

    "It's not right, what BC Ferries is doing," he said Thursday, adding that ongoing fare increases and service cuts propelled 660 Gabriola island residents to sign the petition calling for the study.

    Baker said two bridges are needed — from Gabriola Island to Mudge Island, and from there to Joan Point Park — for what is now a 17-kilometre ferry trip that is supposed to be 20-minute trip.

    However, regular delays mean the crossing can take three times as long, causing major inconvenience for people who work in Nanaimo or go there for doctors' appointments, he said.

    A ferry advisory committee, appointed by BC Ferries, consists mostly of rich and retired people who don't have to deal with deteriorating service, Baker said.

    "They don't care about late ferries for the people who get off shift late, they don't care about early ferries for people who have to get to work really early."

    Gabriola Islanders who are against the fixed crossings because they don't want more people coming to the isolated location should consider moving elsewhere, Baker said.

    "They want to keep people away."

    Transportation Minister Todd Stone said Thursday that the feasibility study prompted by the petition is being done so any future discussions about a fixed link can be based on current information.

    But the ministry said in a news release that an independent consultant conducting the study will not assess the level of public support for a bridge.

    The study, expected to start this fall and finish next spring, will include an examination of potential locations for a fixed link, a cost estimate and a comparison of the cost between a bridge and existing ferry service.

    Jordan Sturdy, a member of the legislature and the parliamentary secretary to the transportation minister, began touring Vancouver Island last week as part of a consultation process on a 10-year transportation plan that includes the entire province.

    "For the people of British Columbia, the ferry system is a hopeless case. It's absolutely unsustainable," Baker said.

    The idea of a bridge between Vancouver and Victoria has also made the rounds over the years as ferry service becomes increasingly unaffordable.

    About 4,000 people live on Gabriola Island, which draws a larger population during summer months.

    BC Ferries' service to the island east of Nanaimo was reduced as a cost-cutting measure last year when service on other routes was also chopped.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Saskatoon woman, 65, faces death if deported to native Pakistan: lawyer

    Saskatoon woman, 65, faces death if deported to native Pakistan: lawyer
    WINNIPEG - A woman who fled to Canada from Pakistan — and who may be stoned to death upon her return, according to her lawyer — lost what may have been her final bid Monday to avoid deportation.

    Saskatoon woman, 65, faces death if deported to native Pakistan: lawyer

    Hitchcock suspense movie helps detect awareness in patient in vegetative state

    Hitchcock suspense movie helps detect awareness in patient in vegetative state
    A group of Canadian neuroscientists say they have successfully used a suspenseful Alfred Hitchcock movie to record the conscious experiences of a patient who has been in a vegetative state for 16 years.

    Hitchcock suspense movie helps detect awareness in patient in vegetative state

    PM could be called as witness in Duffy trial: lawyer

    PM could be called as witness in Duffy trial: lawyer
    OTTAWA - Mike Duffy's lawyer says he isn't going to rule out calling anyone — including Prime Minister Stephen Harper — as a witness in the suspended senator's upcoming trial.

    PM could be called as witness in Duffy trial: lawyer

    Currency markets no place for Bank of Canada to intervene, Poloz says

    Currency markets no place for Bank of Canada to intervene, Poloz says
    OTTAWA - The Bank of Canada is reinforcing its hands-off position when it comes to influencing the Canadian dollar.

    Currency markets no place for Bank of Canada to intervene, Poloz says

    Taxman wants to catch its own bad apples with internal snitch line

    Taxman wants to catch its own bad apples with internal snitch line
    OTTAWA - The taxman wants to know if any of his own are up to no good.

    Taxman wants to catch its own bad apples with internal snitch line

    B.C. Teachers, Government Reach Tentative Deal To End Strike

    B.C. Teachers, Government Reach Tentative Deal To End Strike
    RICHMOND, B.C. - A tentative deal has been reached in the British Columbia teachers' strike, a mediator confirmed Tuesday.The breakthrough in negotiations came on the fifth day of talks at a Richmond, B.C., hotel between the union and the employers' association with the help of Vince Ready.

    B.C. Teachers, Government Reach Tentative Deal To End Strike