IN THE NEWS - November 20, 2017

Opposition to the Surrey's proposed Light Rail Transit system has grown significantly in the last year, and it's becoming clear that the most informed individuals in our region are increasingly against it.

Mike Klassen, an author for the Vancouver Courier and a former vice-chair of the Vancouver City Planning Commission, was among those seeking answers and opinions about Surrey's proposed street-level Light Rail transit system. He published the following comments last month in an opinion column that was in the Courier and several associated local newspapers:

Metro Vancouver's transportation plans driven by politics



Mike Klassen – Oct 25, 2017 on the Vancouver Courier





...the project that seems the most politically driven (thanks to the support of the Mayors’ Council) is Surrey’s $2.6-billion LRT plan to place at-grade rail down on existing roadways.



In response, a Surrey activist group opposed to the LRT plan — “SkyTrain for Surrey” — is championing another way to spend those billions. The group proposes a bus rapid transit (“BRT”) system for the city, while extending the SkyTrain route to Langley.



BRT is shown to successfully integrate into existing transit systems at a much lower cost.



When I reached out to experts who were familiar with the plan and the politics around the Surrey LRT project, not one of them could support it.



[READ MORE] on the Vancouver Courier

While we are certainly curious to hear more about the thoughts of these experts who have stated they are not in support of the LRT project, we're very encouraged to hear that more and more people are taking the position we take of being against street-level Light Rail in Surrey.

One thing that Mike is correct about is that the City of Surrey's choice of street-level light rail technology over SkyTrain is an incredibly politically driven matter.

The idea of placing rail at-grade down existing roadways was born in 2011 when it was first proposed by then-Mayor Dianne Watts, the former leader of the Surrey First civic party which dominates all Surrey Council seats today.

In the last election in 2014, Surrey First campaigned on a promise to complete a first-phase LRT system in Surrey by 2018 (next year). When Surrey First made this promise during the civic elections, we pointed out that trying to deliver any rapid transit project on such a timeline would be unrealistic - while other critics pointed out that senior-level governments had made no concrete commitments to an LRT line and an actual business case had not been made ready.



Consider this – even the rather optimistically written press release by the city of Surrey spells out how tenuous this all is – the application for review is in the most preliminary stages, and no commitments for funding have been made by any level of government.



Furthermore, a business case for LRT has not been made and the city states that getting public support for the transit referendum will be central to the success of a LRT line!



So how is it that mayoral candidate Linda Hepner can commit to completion in 2018?



[READ MORE] on the Laila Yuile's blog, "No Strings Attached"

The latest comments from TransLink CEO Kevin Desmond suggest that the earliest that the first-phase Surrey-Newton-Guildford LRT would be up and running is in 2024. If it really were to take until then to deliver the first phase LRT line, it would be 6 years late.





SkyTrain for Surrey is a local grassroots organization calling for a SkyTrain and Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) network instead of the currently-proposed on-street Light Rail system in Surrey. Our campaign has called on decision-makers to build the Langley Extension of the SkyTrain Expo Line, in conjunction with an extension of the 96 B-Line to Coquitlam Centre and White Rock as a Bus Rapid Transit system.

For further information, contact:

Daryl Dela Cruz, Founding Director

Phone: +1 604 329 3529, info@skytrainforsurrey.org