Quebec City mayor rejects CAQ government's new conditions for tramway - Action News
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Montreal

Quebec City mayor rejects CAQ government's new conditions for tramway

The Quebec government said it won't sign off on Quebec City's tramway project unless it revises the planned shared roadway along Ren-Levesque Boulevard. Mayor Bruno Marchand calls that "an attack" on his city.

Bruno Marchand fires back at provincial officials, calls on Quebec to see project through

Quebec City Mayor Bruno Marchand said he's angered by the new conditions being imposed on the tramway project by the CAQ government, and he won't accept them. (Olivier Bouchard/Radio-Canada)

Mayor Bruno Marchand was visibly frustrated with the CAQ government Wednesday, calling new restrictions imposed on Quebec City's proposedtramway project "an attack" on his administration and residents of his city.

"We don't understand it all," he said at a news conference. "They're adding some new conditions that we never heard of before. We don't accept it."

On Tuesday, the premier's office told Radio-Canada it won't sign off on the $3.3-billion project unless the city changes course on a planned shared roadway alongRn Levesque Boulevard between the National Assembly and Universit Laval.

Franois Legault's office says the needs of drivers and public transit riders mustbe balanced, and Transport Minister Franois Bonnardel said he is worried cars, pedestrians, cyclists and the tramway all sharing a busy street will cause too much congestion.

Bonnardel said it appears Marchand has abandoned the project's regional vision but insisted the government isn't trying to bury the project altogether.

"If cabinet wanted to kill the project, we would have tabled a bill to do that," he said. "We didn't do that. We're moving the project forward."

Quebec City's tramway was longtime mayor Rgis Labeaume's passion project but was passed on to Marchand when Labeaume retired from municipal politics in November 2021.

Quebec City and the province have gone back and forth for years on the proposed routewhether it will be part of an eventual third link between Quebec City and Lvis, and how the tramway will be incorporated into existing city infrastructure.

They finally reached a verbal agreement on a redesign just over a year ago.

Photo of what a tramway plan would look like in a city centre
Part of Quebec City's tramway project includes a revamp of De La Couronne Street, pictured here. Mayor Bruno Marchand says people who live in the city support the idea of sharing the tram sharing the street with vehicles and pedestrians. (Ville de Qubec)

Marchand needs cabinet to sign off on several ministerial decrees before Quebec City can put out calls for tenders and start construction.

Legault saidthe municipal administration needs to show it's listening to the people the tramway will serve.

"There are citizens in Quebec who have questions about Ren-Lvesque Boulevard, the impact on Laurier Boulevard and Grande Alle," said Legault. "I think these are legitimate concerns."

Marchand disagrees with Legault's assessment.

"When I heard the government say it's going to be a parking lot on Laurier Boulevard, a parking lot on Ren Lvesque Boulevard, it's not true," he said. He said more than 1,000 Quebec City residents who participated in consultations supported the shared-road proposal.

Earlier Wednesday, opposition leaders at the National Assembly accused the Legault government of lacking the political will to see the project through.

Marchand says the city and the province are supposed to be working on the tramway together, and he's tired of Quebec asking the city to go back to the drawing board at every step of the process.

He says the tramway is sorely needed to improve mobility, reduce emissions and boost the city's economy.

"We're asking the government to not [impose] any conditions at all," he said. "We're ready to move on. We need to move on."

With files from Radio-Canada