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Ottawa

Vision Zero will cost taxpayers, councillor cautions

If residents wantto reduce the number of deaths and serious injuries on Ottawa's roads further than the 20 per cent proposed under the city's latest road safety plan, they're going to have to pay for it, a city councillor is warning.

City's latest road safety plan aims to reduce deaths, serious injuries by 20%

Headshot of man.
Kitchissippi Coun. Jeff Leiper said he's happy the city's plan aims to improve bike lanes and enforce safer driving, but would prefer a more aggressive push toward Vision Zero. (Matthew Kupfer/CBC)

If residents wantto reduce the number of deaths and serious injuries on Ottawa's roads further than the 20 per cent proposed under the city's latest road safety plan, they're going to have to pay for it, a city councillor is warning.

Kitchissippi Coun. Jeff Leipersaid while he applauds the speed reductions and infrastructure investmentsannounced Monday, they might not be enough.

"It is absolutely a step in the right direction. The question is whether it's a step far enough," Leiper told CBC Radio's Ottawa Morning.

There are real, achievable reductions we can get by raising taxes.- Coun. Jeff Leiper

Leiper would prefer to see the city steer toward"Vision Zero,"an international effort to eliminate all traffic deaths and serious injuries by changing the way cities design roads and set traffic rules.

The report behind the city's plan says it "aligns with the principles" of the Vision Zero movement.

In 2018, there were 27 fatalities resulting from collisions in Ottawa: one cyclist, eight pedestrians,three motorcyclists, 11 motorists and four passengers.

So far this year, three cyclists have been killed in collisions.

For Leiper, a 20 per cent reduction won't put much of a dent in those grim statistics.

"I'm not sure that Ottawans are prepared to accept that that is an ambitious enough goal," he said.

But paying for the city to step up its effortsis a burden that will likelyfall on taxpayers if funds can't be pulled from elsewhere in the city's budget, Leiper noted.

'The question is whether it's a step far enough'

5 years ago
Duration 0:56
Coun. Jeff Leiper says reaching a goal of zero road injuries and deaths in Ottawa won't happen in the next four years. The city's new road safety plan includes measures to reduce those incidents by 20 per cent.

A hefty price tag

The road safety action plan proposes$31.5 million in measures and initiatives, up from $25 million in 2019.

According to collision data collected from2013 to 2017 Ottawa currently has an average of 2.8 fatal injuries per 100,000 in population.

That"is significantly lower than Canada's national rate of 5.8, and aligns with that of Sweden and the Netherlands, which are some of the leading countries in the world that have adopted asafesystems approach toroadsafetyresulting in low rates of serious injuries and fatalities."

But that's not aggressive enough for Leiper, who said it couldtake hundreds of millions of dollarsto eventually hit Vision Zero.

"There are real, achievable reductions we can get by raising taxes," he said.

"There are real, achievable reductions we can get by reallocating money within our budget from building roads to making our roads safer."

Mayor Jim Watson, centre, and transportation committee chair Stephen Blais, second from right, unveiled the city's road safety plan Monday. (Jean Delisle/CBC)

Leiper said he'd be "more than happy" to see a tax increase of half a per cent if that meant even a further 10 per cent reduction, to a target of 30 per cent.

Leiper acknowledged revenue from tax hikes, currently set at three per cent in the city's 2020 draft budget, is alreadyspoken for to help tackle such serious issues as the opioidcrisis and affordable housing shortage.

"I don't know if we're going to be able to achieve zero in the next four years though with what the residents of Ottawa are ... willing to see in terms of how much they spend," he said.

The plan's proposed measures will be discussed at a Dec. 4 transportation committee meeting and debated by council Dec. 11.

With files from CBC Radio's Ottawa Morning