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Ottawa

Road projects unfinished as city updates to-do list

The City of Ottawa is preparing to draft a new master plan for roads, rail lines and pathways, even though half the projects on its lastto-do list remain undone.

Cycling, transit projects have been accelerated while roadwork falls behind

The Airport Parkway was to be widened from two to four lanes between Brookfield and Hunt Club roads by 2019, but the project is still in the queue. (Google)

The City of Ottawa is preparing to draft a new master plan for its roads, rail lines and pathways, even though half the road projects on its lastto-do list remain undone.

In 2013, city council approved a short list of 13 new roads with a total price tag of $240 million, to be completed by 2019. Many more wereon a long list of projectsto be completed by2031, all part of the city'stransportation master plan.

But the city has fallen behind.

Only five of the 13 projects on the short list have been finished. Others,such aswideningthe Airport Parkway, realigning Greenbank Road in Barrhaven and building a major new arterial road for Stittsville remain in the queue.

"Money isn't coming in as fast as had been anticipated, and some roads are costing more than they were supposed to," said Cumberland Coun. Stephen Blais, who chairs the city's transportation committee andrepresents rapidly growing sections of Orlans.

Building new roads and widening existing ones is predominantly paid for through development charges, which have fallen short in recent years. The city expectsits revamped fee structure, approved recently, will help fill that gap.

Suburbs feeling the squeeze

Residents of Ottawa'sbooming suburbs have complained aboutnot getting the infrastructure they were promised when they bought their homes.

In Barrhaven, Half Moon Bay residents will have to endure repairsto a bridge on Greenbank Road that were put off because it was never expected to be used so heavily, for so long.

In Stittsville, Coun. Glen Gower's focus is a half-built arterial road, Robert Grant Avenue.

Gower said the road, complete with bus lane and multi-use paths,hasbeen talked about since the 1990s, but has now been left out of the city's plans untilafter 2031.

In thattime, Stittsville is set to grow by nearly 10,000 homes.

"To think that we won't have this major transportation infrastructure built before then makes absolutely no sense,"Gowersaid.

Without it, nearby streets must absorb more traffic andbusinesses on Stittsville Main Street suffer because their thoroughfare is being used like a highway,he said.

"I can totally understand the frustration we're hearing from residents in terms ofthe difficulty in getting around the community," Gower said.

The city begins athree-year process of updatingits transportation planWednesday, soGower will soon have to jostlewith other councillors to get hisprojecthigher on the next priority list.

Transit, cycling projects ahead of schedule

One of the main priorities of the city's master plan, however, has beento get people out of their cars. So while road projects have fallen behind,the city sped uptransit and cycling projects, andallotted more money to them.

Since 2013,the city has handed out contracts to extend Stage 2 light rail more quickly than first planned, and the price tag has grown to nearly $4.7 billion.

Upper levels of government also gave extrafunding for cyclingOttawa will soon have spent$80 million on bike infrastructure since 2013.

Meanwhile, the Ontario government has announced it will not double gas tax funds, which Ottawa counts on to buildtransit and cycling infrastructure,and is changing the way cities collectdevelopment charges, the majorsource of funding for municipal roads.

"All of that plays a role in what we can afford to do and how fast we can afford to do it all," Blais said.

Coun. Stephen Blais says some road projects were delayed because the city didn't collect as much from developers as expected to pay for them. (Giacomo Panico/CBC)