Sunday 22 February 2015

Active Transportation removed from draft 2015 budget


Do you remember how pleased we were a short while ago when $300,000 was added to the City of Guelph 2014 budget for Active Transportation? It was supposed to be $300,000 a year for 10 years.  Well, it has been removed from the 2015 draft budget.


The Active Transportation fund was to be used for a long awaited  multi-use path beside Woodlawn Road.  $300,000 was already put aside for it in 2014.  The design process for this multi-use path has been well underway and it is still being delayed.  Back in 2012,  the late Richard Henry, Chief Engineer,  said how dangerous Woodlawn Road was to pedestrians in its current state, and that it was a public safety issue. Failure to rectify safety issues when identified exposes the city to lawsuits in the event of injuries .

City staff now say that the Active Transportation funding is out of the 2015 draft budget. While they say that it is "in the forecast for 2016-2017" there is no real assurance  that the $300,000 wouldn't be delayed the following years as well.

Many communities already recognize the importance and value of supporting non-auto modes: the Region of Waterloo has “sustainable transportation” as one of their five corporate strategic objectives, but an integrated transportation system is currently not one of Guelph Council's objectives.

Below you will find information on the upcoming public meeting on the capital budget on February 25th at 6pm. This is an important council session not to miss. 

Council needs to know that Active Transportation is very important and among the top priorities for Guelph. Not only does it affect the general health of our population, it also improves accessibility throughout our community for those without access to vehicles, improving access to our parks and open spaces, jobs, and schools.
We have many delegates that will be speaking on behalf of this issue. Please consider come out and show your support. We need you!


Sunday 15 February 2015

Speed limit reduction around school zones does not go far enough



 
Dr. Lin, Emergency Room Physician, concerned about children's safety
This article was also published on the front page of the Guelph Mercury, Feb. 12, 2015
http://www.guelphmercury.com/opinion-story/5334785-lower-speed-limit-around-guelph-school-zones-doesn-t-go-far-enough/
 Kudos to the former city council for voting  in a 30 km/hour speed limit on collector roads, and 40 km/hr on arterials in elementary school zones. “As a community, we all share a responsibility to ensure the safety of our children, youth and crossing guard” said then  Chief Bryan   Larkin .   Former Councillor Kovach, according to the Guelph Tribune, said she had been trying for 9 years to get something like this done.

Unfortunately, once the reduced speed limit signs were installed this past September 2014, the gap between the intention of doing well and the reality of truly making a difference, could easily be seen.  A very good example of this gap is visible on the streets surrounding King George Public School, where only Lemon Street has the speed reduction sign.

Consider the viewpoint of  Dr. Daren Lin.  Dr. Lin is an emergency physician at Guelph General Hospital.  He also has a daughter who attends King George Public School.  He has noticed, first hand, a significant problem with the current speed signage.

At King George, students access the school from all directions, and not just the municipal address, which is on Lemon Street. That is where the 30 km/hr sign is located.  The school's main entrance and teacher's parking lot are off Metcalfe St.  Buses drop-off on St. Catherine St.  Neither of these streets has a speed reduction sign.  According to Dr. Lin, the crossing guards at his child's school on Metcalfe Street are putting themselves in front of cars going 50km/h  or more, with a handheld stop sign.

There are other examples of busy streets adjacent to schools with no change in speed limits.  For example, Powell Street at Victoria Public School has no speed reduction signage despite being the location of the bus drop off point.  Windsor Street beside Waverly Public School has the same problem.  

Being an emergency room physician, Dr. Lin is well aware of the dangers of higher  traffic speeds.  “Accidents are by far the most common cause of death in Canada in school age children, well ahead of cancer, infections, or other causes,”  says Dr. Lin.  “According to the World Health Organization, the risk of a pedestrian being killed when hit by a car going 50 km/h is 80%, as opposed to a 10% risk when hit by a vehicle going 30 km/h.  From my point of view, this benefit is clearly worth the extra seconds it would take drivers to traverse school zone at the lower speed."  

There is even an economic cost to accidents, Dr. Lin explains further. For a major trauma, hospitalization costs are in the thousands per day to our health care system and it may take days to weeks before discharge.  For Guelph parents, it would mean a leave of absence from their jobs in order to stay in Hamilton across McMaster Children's Hospital to be near their injured child.  Businesses would lose their employee for a time. The psychological devastation on both the victim’s family as well as the motorist would be impossible to turn right.

The Ontario government  now acknowledges that reducing default speeds on local streets would reduce pedestrian, cyclist, and motorist deaths.  The province is organizing public consultations in the spring to consider options around allowing municipalities to set 40km per hour speed limits within their boundaries, where there are currently no speed limits posted.   

Whether or not one agrees with this new policy initiative, the very least we can do, right now here in Guelph,  is to implement lower speed  limits on all roads adjacent to schools where children walk and cycle, and not just on the street that has the school address.

While it may cost more to put out a few more signs, the maintenance cost cannot be any higher than maintaining any other sign in the city.  We cannot forget the unintended consequences of accidents or limited mobility for our vulnerable population by continuing with the status quo.  

In my mind, it should be a basic human right to be able to walk and bike safely to school without the fear of a preventable death from high speed traffic.
Yvette Tendick