logo
Ontario's bill to remove certain bike lanes to be tested with Charter challenge

Ontario's bill to remove certain bike lanes to be tested with Charter challenge

CBC16-04-2025

The Ontario government's "irrational and dangerous" bid to remove three major Toronto bike lanes should be ruled unconstitutional, a lawyer for a group of cyclists said in court Wednesday, arguing the province's own internal advice and experts suggest the move won't accomplish its stated goal to ease congestion.
Lawyers for a Toronto cycling advocacy group and two other cyclists are asking the Ontario Superior Court of Justice to strike down parts of a law empowering the province to remove the 19 kilometres of protected bike lanes on Yonge Street, Bloor Street and University Avenue, and replace them with vehicle lanes.
"It's a narrow challenge to what we see as the irrational and dangerous ways that this government has chosen to remove these bike lanes," said lawyer Andrew Lewis.
The challenge was brought by the advocacy group Cycle Toronto and two other cyclists — a university student who relies on the Bloor Street bike lane to get to school and a bike delivery driver who uses the lanes daily.
They argue the province's bid to remove the lanes violates their constitutional right to life and has no connection to its stated objective to reduce congestion. The bill could even make traffic worse, they suggest.
Removal doesn't violate Constitution: province's lawyer
A lawyer for the government argued Wednesday that removing bike lanes does not violate the Constitution.
Bike lanes were put in place under provincial law to reduce the danger posed by drivers, lawyer Josh Hunter said, and the government could choose to take away that risk-reduction measure for other reasons, such as to ease congestion.
"No one's saying the government is causing the harm. It's the drivers on the road that's causing the harm," said Hunter.
Six cyclists were killed in Toronto last year, all on roads without protected bike lanes, a lawyer for the cyclists said.
Premier Doug Ford's Progressive Conservative government has said that the law passed last year, which also requires municipalities across Ontario to get the province's approval for bike lanes that cut into vehicle traffic, was a bid to fight traffic gridlock.
Lewis used the government's own internal documents to try to undercut that claim.
Removing bike lanes won't reduce congestion, lawyer says
He said a document signed by the minister of transportation on Sept. 9, 2024, advised that the government's plan "may not reduce congestion."
He said a Ministry of Transportation briefing note dated Oct. 28, a week after the government introduced the bike lane bill, stated that "removing cycling infrastructure may not have the desired goal of reducing congestion."
Lewis also cited an engineering report, commissioned by the government and finalized earlier this year, that found while removing the bike lanes might increase vehicle capacity, the actual alleviation of congestion may be "negligible or short lived."
The same report also found bike lanes are predicted to reduce crashes involving cyclists, pedestrians and motorists by between 35 and 50 per cent, Lewis said.
"Those facts were kept from the public until produced here, while (the government was) engaging in a public relations campaign to the contrary," he said.
'Two lanes is more than one,' government lawyer says
Hunter, the government lawyer, argued the law was connected to its purpose: to increase the space available for cars.
"Two lanes is more than one," he said.
In response, Justice Paul Schabas suggested some traffic experts may question whether adding more lanes would just induce more traffic, and congestion could wind up just as bad as it was before the bike lanes were removed.
Hunter suggested a study prepared by a Toronto Metropolitan University professor and submitted as evidence found travel times worsened after the bike lanes were installed.
But Schabas took issue with that report, too, and how it compared travel times in 2020, when "hardly anybody was on the road" due to the pandemic, with times in 2021, when it was "a little busier".
"I found that very odd," he said.
The bike lane issue has sparked protests by the public and pushback from the City of Toronto. Mayor Olivia Chow and the city have proposed a solution to the province that would allow for a car lane to be returned to those roads while also keeping a bike lane.
Mayor wants 'win-win solution with the province'
A spokesperson for Chow said the mayor is committed to achieving a "win-win solution with the province."
"Discussions with the province are ongoing," Zeus Eden said in a statement.
Earlier this month, a spokesperson for the provincial transportation minister suggested the government was open to collaboration with the city, provided it funds its portion of infrastructure needs.
Ford's recent re-election campaign included fresh promises to reduce traffic congestion. He has cited the bike lane on Bloor Street, not far from his own home, in describing the issues he hopes to address.
The premier has said he's not against bike lanes but prefers them on secondary routes.
Lawyers for the cyclists argue there's no evidence that cyclists would avoid arterial roads and cite Toronto's city manager as saying there's no feasible parallel alternative that wouldn't cut into traffic lanes.
The initial stretch of the Bloor bike lane was installed in 2016, then extended several times since the start of the pandemic. It stretches around 13 kilometres from near Islington Avenue to Castle Frank.
Temporary University Avenue bike lanes installed in 2020 were made permanent in 2021, the same year the Yonge Street lanes were installed.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The ACLU demands the US release and return a Dominican woman living legally in Puerto Rico
The ACLU demands the US release and return a Dominican woman living legally in Puerto Rico

Winnipeg Free Press

time9 hours ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

The ACLU demands the US release and return a Dominican woman living legally in Puerto Rico

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) — In late May, a 47-year-old woman from the Dominican Republic was detained by police in Puerto Rico after she entered a municipal building seeking a permit to sell ice cream on the beach to support herself. Upon being turned over to federal agents, the Dominican woman presented her passport, driver's license and work permits that proved she was living in the U.S. territory legally, her attorney Ángel Robles and the American Civil Liberties Union of Puerto Rico, said Monday. Despite the documents presented, authorities recently transferred her to Texas as part of a federal crackdown on migrants living illegally in U.S. jurisdictions. The woman, whose first name is Aracelis, has not been fully identified because she is a victim of domestic violence. Aracelis is among hundreds of people who have been detained in Puerto Rico since large-scale arrests began in late January, surprising many in the U.S. territory that has long welcomed migrants. Robles and the ACLU demanded Aracelis' release and return to Puerto Rico. 'It's outrageous,' Robles said in a phone interview. 'No charges have been filed against her, and she is not in the system.' Because her name does not appear in a federal database, Robles' request for a bond hearing was denied. 'This case is one of unspeakable abuse,' said Annette Martínez Orabona, the ACLU director in Puerto Rico. The case has fueled already simmering anger against the administration of Puerto Rico Gov. Jenniffer González Colón and local authorities who have been working with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents to arrest those believed to be living illegally in the U.S. territory. In a letter sent Monday to the governor and the island's justice secretary, the ACLU accused Puerto Rico's government of violating the Constitution and local laws by providing ICE and U.S. Homeland Security with confidential information on nearly 6,000 immigrants. It also accused ICE of using that data to go on a 'fishing expedition' that it called 'arbitrary and abusive.' A spokesman for Homeland Security Investigations did not immediately respond to a request for comment. In Puerto Rico, undocumented immigrants are allowed to open bank accounts and obtain a special driver's license. The ACLU in Puerto Rico also accused González Colón's administration of not providing protocols to local government agencies for how to deal with such requests from the federal government. The ACLU requested, among other things, that Puerto Rico's government issue an executive order barring public agencies from collaborating with ICE subpoenas not accompanied by a court order. A spokeswoman for the governor did not immediately return a message for comment. From Jan. 26 to March 20, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents have arrested more than 200 people, the majority of them Dominican. Updated numbers were not immediately available.

Judge blocks administration from enforcing anti-diversity and anti-transgender executive orders
Judge blocks administration from enforcing anti-diversity and anti-transgender executive orders

Winnipeg Free Press

time13 hours ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

Judge blocks administration from enforcing anti-diversity and anti-transgender executive orders

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — A federal judge in California has blocked the Trump administration from enforcing anti-diversity and anti-transgender executive orders in grant funding requirements that LGBTQ+ organizations say are unconstitutional. U.S. District Judge Jon Tigar said Monday that the federal government cannot force recipients to halt programs that promote diversity, equity and inclusion or acknowledge the existence of transgender people in order to receive grant funding. The order will remain in effect while the legal case continues, although government lawyers will likely appeal. The funding provisions 'reflect an effort to censor constitutionally protected speech and services promoting DEI and recognizing the existence of transgender individuals,' Tigar wrote. He went on to say that the executive branch must still be bound by the Constitution in shaping its agenda and that even in the context of federal subsidies, 'it cannot weaponize Congressionally appropriated funds to single out protected communities for disfavored treatment or suppress ideas that it does not like or has deemed dangerous.' The plaintiffs include health centers, LGBTQ+ services groups and the Gay Lesbian Bisexual Transgender Historical Society. All receive federal funding and say they cannot complete their missions by following the president's executive orders. The San Francisco AIDS Foundation, one of the plaintiffs, said in 2023 it received a five-year grant from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to expand and enhance sexual health services, including the prevention of sexually transmitted infections. The $1.3 million project specifically targets communities disproportionately affected by sexual health disparities. But in April, the CDC informed the nonprofit that it must 'immediately terminate all programs, personnel, activities, or contracts' that promote DEI or gender ideology. President Donald Trump has signed a flurry of executive orders since taking office in January, including ones to roll back transgender protections and stop DEI programs. Lawyers for the government say that the president is permitted to 'align government funding and enforcement strategies' with his policies. Plaintiffs say that Congress — and not the president — has the power to condition how federal funds are used, and that the executive orders restrict free speech rights.

Kosovo's president sets Oct. 12 for municipal elections while a legislative impasse continues
Kosovo's president sets Oct. 12 for municipal elections while a legislative impasse continues

Winnipeg Free Press

time17 hours ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

Kosovo's president sets Oct. 12 for municipal elections while a legislative impasse continues

PRISTINA, Kosovo (AP) — Kosovo 's president on Monday set Oct. 12 as the date for municipal elections, while the country remains in a legislative impasse without a functioning parliament and a new Cabinet since its Feb. 9 parliamentary vote. President Vjosa Osmani urged political parties, organizations and public institutions to ensure an all-inclusive, free and fair process. The last municipal elections in October 2021, for mayors of 38 municipalities and about 1,000 town hall lawmakers, were mainly won by center-right opposition parties. The Srpska List party of Kosovo's ethnic Serb minority, which is close to the Serbian government in Belgrade, won the 10 seats in northern Kosovar municipalities. Municipal authorities run the local economy, education, health, infrastructure, natural resources, tourism, culture and sports but not defense or public order institutions. Acting Prime Minister Albin Kurti's left-wing Self-Determination Movement won the Feb. 9 parliamentary election with 48 of 120 seats, falling short of the required majority of 61 to elect a new speaker or form a Cabinet on its own. The parliament has not succeeded in electing the new speaker, as deputies in opposition parties object to Kurti's candidate. Lawmakers have tried and failed 29 times since the first session of parliament in April 15. The Constitution imposes no deadline to elect one. Without a speaker, Kurti cannot be formally nominated as prime minister and form a Cabinet. If the situation continues, the president can turn to any of the other parties. If no party can form a Cabinet, the country will face another parliamentary election. Kosovo declared independence from Serbia in 2008. Most Western nations recognize its sovereignty, but Serbia and its allies Russia and China don't. ___ Semini reported from Tirana, Albania.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store