Some Quebec City-area commuters feel betrayed as government shrinks 3rd link - Action News
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Some Quebec City-area commuters feel betrayed as government shrinks 3rd link

The Quebec government has decided to build a third link that will be used exclusively for public transit, sparking debate among those in the Quebec City area.

Others hopeful plan for tunnel will boost public transit options

A man speaks into a microphone, seated in his car.
Stphane Bergeron, a resident of Lvis, said the new plan for the third link is disappointing. He was hoping it would mitigate the traffic on the bridge. (CBC)

Lvis resident Karine Huard was not happy when she heard the Quebec government was backtracking on its plans for a highway tunnel connecting Quebec City to Lvis.

Transport Minister Genevive Guilbault made the official announcement about the changes Thursday morning, confirmingthe third link project would be substantially smaller than originally planned and would be exclusively for public transit.

As a resident of the South Shore municipality, Huard says the traffic on the Qubec Bridge and the Pierre-Laporte Bridge, which needs repair, is constant.

During the 2022 election campaign, Premier Franois Legault maintained the project was necessary to reduce traffic congestion and to keep up with population growth in the area.

Huard said she was counting on that becoming a reality.

"We feel tricked. Just to construct a tunnel for public transit despite the traffic that is increasing, it doesn't make sense," said Huard.

"All the promises they made, they're not respecting them."

A woman with glasses
Karine Huard said the new plan is going back on the government's promises. (CBC)

Guilbault said changes the plans for the tunnel wasa "difficult decision"but was made based onabout 40 studies and reports on the third link.

But on Wednesday, news of the announcement already had people in the Quebec City area split with some hoping the change could encourage the use of public transit and others concerned it won't do much for people whodepend on their vehicles.

'Sometimes they don't think ahead'

Pointing to apartment buildings under construction in Lvis, local Stphane Bergeron says the third link should address the increasing population.

He often takes his car into Quebec City and says limiting the lanes to public transit won't do anything to help with the intense traffic.

"They made some nice promises but sometimes they don't think ahead," said Bergeron.

Quebec City's Natacha Castonguay is neither for nor against the projectbut says she was not surprised by the announcement that the government was backtracking.

She says people have been receiving mixed messages over the past few years.

A woman in a pink coat looks at the camera, standing on a busy sidewalk
Natacha Castonguay says she would have liked to have seen the feasibility studies before getting the news of the changes to the third link. (Rachel Watts/CBC)

"Every two weeks we have different scenarios presented to us. What is really not good is the fact that they didn't share the [feasibility] report earlier," said Castonguay.

"We should take a little moment before announcing something and wait for the data."

The government has been criticized for not releasing the results of the feasibility studywhich were released Thursday online on theRseau express de la Capitalewebsite.

Illustration of the third link
The third link, as presented at a news conference in 2022, included a twin-tube tunnel. (Rseau express de la capitale)

A 'courageous' decision says organization promoting public transit

Angle Pineau-Lemieux, withAccs transports viables, an organization that promotes the use of public transportation, says reserving the lanes for public transit is the "responsible" and "courageous" decision because it reinforces research.

"Everybody's seeing that scientific literature is unanimous. It says clearly that adding more rows, adding more highways always leads in the long term to more traffic It's a fact," said Pineau-Lemieux.

She says there need to be more options to encourage people to take public transit.

"We need to ask ourselves the question, what's the best way to encourage Quebec City and Lvis residents to change from solo cars to public transit? Because right now people are saying I want to go toward public transit," said Pineau-Lemieux. "But I think that people right now find themselves with no options."

A man stands at a podium in front of a banner with the City of Quebec logo
Quebec City Mayor Bruno Marchand says the third link has to reflect the reality of Quebec City and Lvis. (milie Warren/CBC)

Quebec City mayor Bruno Marchand agreedthis new plan could mean good things for the mobility of the two cities.

"It's a great example of leadership from the minister, Genevive Guilbault, in order to make this project adapted to the new reality, to the new needs," said Marchand at a news conference on Wednesday.

With files from milie Warren and Radio-Canada