Skip to content

Canadian Urbanism Uncovered

Video: Breaking the Political Gridlock to Address the Transportation Challenge

Read more articles by

Video Vancouver

[EDITOR’S NOTE: On January 28, 2014, Anne Golden spoke at  SFU Vancouver  as part of the Rethinking Transportation: New Voices, New Ideas series. Her insightful talk was called  Breaking the Political Gridlock to Address the Transportation Challenge: Lessons Learned from the Greater Toronto and Hamilton Area . Here is the video of the presentation, prepared by SFU Continuing Studies.]

Metro Vancouver is not the only region in North America facing difficult choices about how best to meet the future transportation needs of a growing population—and how to pay for it. Like Metro Vancouver, which will add one million new residents over the next 30 years, the Greater Toronto and Hamilton Area is projected to see its population increase by 40 per cent in the next 20 years.

Both Metro Vancouver and Toronto are seeking ways to give their residents new transportation choices, ease congestion, better connect people with jobs, and enable people to travel efficiently in all directions.

To preserve and enhance their economic vitality and quality of life, both Metro Vancouver and the Toronto city-region cannot postpone significant investment in their transportation networks. In Toronto, where political gridlock has led to inaction, Dr. Anne Golden led a panel in the fall of 2013 to find a viable transit investment strategy for the Greater Toronto and Hamilton Area.

In this January 2014 lecture at SFU’s Vancouver campus, she described the political and financial context that was blocking progress in Toronto, and set out the plan that she and her 12 panel members hope will break the political and transportation gridlock.

Learn about other lectures in the Rethinking Transportation series.

Recommended