Four weeks. That's how long it's been since crews started work on the short (about 70 metres) contra-flow bike lane on Chester Hill Road between Cambridge and Broadview Avenues. I've been sitting on this post since they started work on the lane around November 20. Instead of celebrating its completion a day or two later, I'm still waiting.
To date, the 70 metres of asphalt is only half painted: the solid yellow line separating the lane from oncoming traffic is done, but the diamond markings are still missing. In their place for about a third of the length are diagonal stripes that prohibit traffic (including bikes) from using that portion of the road. Those were put in earlier this year when the City repainted the road to make left- and right-turn lanes.
Only one bike lane sign is up (ironically, the one that proclaims the end of the lane) so far. Another is still covered in plastic wrap, and at least two more signs are still missing: one "bicycles excepted" sign allowing bikes to turn onto the street from Broadview despite the right-turn prohibition, and a stop sign for bikes at Cambridge (which, I'm quite sure, all cyclists will obey).
The signs and paint merely formalize what has long been an informal and well-used route to the Bloor Viaduct for cyclists wishing to avoid the traffic on Broadview. Chester Hill is one-way for only a single very short block, presumably for the express purpose of preventing cars from taking this very same shortcut.
I'm not faulting Transportation Services for the snow and rain we've seen since the day after they started work on the lane, and I realize they can't do much until the snow is gone. But it's unacceptable that virtually all of the bike lane work in the city was left to the last three months of the year.
When Adrian Heaps made his ill-advised promise of 30 km of lanes this year, many cyclists were skeptical. Even so, the year's piddly effort of 5 km or so is, in a word, pathetic. I don't think anyone expected that the city could do any worse than the glacial pace of installations during the last couple of years, yet they managed handily. So now Heaps is promising 50 km for next year? Pardon my skepticism, but once bitten...
The astounding thing is that Council still talks about finishing the Bikeway Network by 2012. They do realize that that's only 5 more working years, right? They do realize that since the inception of the Bike Plan, bike lanes are being created at a quarter of the necessary pace, and that even that pace has been slowing down in recent years, right? They do realize that they have no credibility on this matter any more, right? They do realize that their lip service is the reason that groups like OURS are thriving this year, right?
Council's plan to kickstart the creation of 50 km of lanes next year by picking all the low-hanging fruit sounds good, but it means that they're leaving the more difficult 400 km or so for the final four years. If they can only do 50 km of "easily-approved" lanes in a single year, what are the odds that they'd be able to do 100 km of "difficult" lanes each year for the four years after that? I believe the correct answer would be "Nil."
I suppose that the Chester Hill bike lane is a perfect metaphor for the bike plan: a small but important piece of a larger puzzle that seems hopelessly stalled after a promising start. Well, there's always next year.
Val Dodge is a Toronto cyclist and writer with a keen eye and some uncanny math skills (of which our council is hopefully taking advantage). This post originally appeared on Dodgeville, where Val shares more of his unique observations.
Comments
Darren_S
You have the year wrong.
Tue, 12/18/2007 - 13:06I received Heaps' ward newsletter yesterday. The Bike Plan will be completed in 2010, I doubled checked to make sure it says 2010.
You should have seen the size of the wings on the pig that delivered it.
Aidan
"Something's rotten in the state of..." - not Denmark.
Tue, 12/18/2007 - 14:02Hey, 2010 is doable if we hire the Danes.
Anonymous (not verified)
Doable
Tue, 12/18/2007 - 15:00Danes, yes, or the Urban Repair Squad.
Darren_S
Toddlers
Tue, 12/18/2007 - 16:02If we put together a little army of toddlers they would probably outperform City Hall on most fronts.
Val Dodge
2010 it is
Tue, 12/18/2007 - 18:16Darren, you're right. Even his web site claims:
Well, chop-chop Mr. Heaps. You've got some diligence due real soon now.
Darren_S
A bit more
Tue, 12/18/2007 - 19:54I posted a bit more about his newsletter.
http://www.torontocranks.com/?p=230
hamish (not verified)
The glaciers are melting
Wed, 12/19/2007 - 11:08The glaciers are melting faster than we're proceeding on the best way of slowing it all down. But it is Ward 29, and while Councillor Ootes did DID! vote in favour of it despite one strident objector in the area, maybe the staff are waiting to see if there will be a change of mind/heart.
And it's also Caronto, the carrupt. Sigh.