Latest Issues

Active Transportation Groups Call on Federal Government to Fund Pedestrian & Cycling Infrastructure

Walk Toronto has joined with the Toronto Environmental Alliance and Cycle Toronto in calling on the federal Minister of Infrastructure and Communities, Amarjeet Sohi, to include walking and cycling projects in the major infrastructure investments planned for the next four years.

Walking and cycling meet all three of the federal infrastructure plan’s priorities: transportation, environmental improvements, and building communities. There are numerous “shovel-ready” projects that improve walking and cycling awaiting funding in Toronto, including the Eglinton Connects project that would accompany the Eglinton Crosstown LRT, and recreational trails that would complete the trail network.

Read the letter to Minister of Infrastructure and Communities, Amarjeet Sohi (PDF).

Read the letter to Mayor John Tory (PDF).

Latest Issues

Private sidewalk snow clearing, painting street murals, and Traffic Calming Options Manual – Walk Toronto at Public Works

Walk Toronto presented deputations on three separate items at the Public Works and Infrastructure Committee (PWIC) meeting on November 12, 2015.

Mark Earley, a member of Walk Toronto’s sidewalk snow clearing subcommittee, deputed in person on the item “Clearing of Snow from Sidewalks – Current Processes and Future Considerations“. This staff report discussed how to improve snow clearing where private property owners are required to clear snow from the sidewalk. Walk Toronto’s deputation called for better enforcement, but noted that the ultimate solution is for the City to clear all sidewalks. The staff report was adopted.

Read Mark Earley’s deputation (PDF).

Dylan Reid sent a deputation on behalf of Walk Toronto on the item “Options for Permitting Street or Intersection Murals on Local Streets“. Councillor Cesar Palacio had requested staff to create a process to allow residents to paint murals on their streets, as had been done on a street in his ward. However, staff responded with a report recommending against this proposal. Walk Toronto’s deputation addressed the various issues brought forward by staff and argued in favour of allowing communities to paint street murals. The item was deferred to the January PWIC meeting.

Read Dylan Reid’s deputation (PDF).

Mark Jacobs sent a deputation on behalf of Walk Toronto on the item “Traffic Calming Options Manual“. Councillor and chair of PWIC Jaye Robinson proposed the creation of “easy-to-use traffic calming manual for use by neighbourhood groups.” Walk Toronto supported this idea and identified some options that should be included, and some potential sources of information for the manual. The item was adopted with minor amendments.

Read Mark Jacobs’ deputation (PDF)

Latest Issues

Walk Toronto supports new sidewalk on Midland Ave.

The southern portion of Midland Ave. in Scarborough is a collector road that is also part of the Waterfront Trail used by pedestrians, runners and cyclists. As per City of Toronto policy, the City plans to take advantage of work on this road to install sidewalks on both sides. Installing the sidewalk along with other work will greatly reduce the cost.

In response to local opposition to this sidewalk, the local councillor, Gary Crawford, has submitted a motion to the Public Works and Infrastructure Committee to stop the installation of this sidewalk. (The motion attempts to muddle the issue by calling for the installation of a sidewalk further north – something the City already plans to do when it gets the opportunity).

Walk Toronto has submitted a detailed deputation to the Public Works and Infrastructure Committee in support of the sidewalk installation. It is very important for improving pedestrian safety that the City policy of installing sidewalks on collector roads be consistently implemented, especially when it is part of a designated pedestrian trail. Read all of the reasons for installing a sidewalk on Midland Ave. (PDF) in our deputation.

UPDATE: the Public Works and Infrastructure Committee deferred this motion to their October meeting. At the October meeting, the the Committee voted 4-0 to support the sidewalk. The item did not need to get approved by council, so this decision is final and the sidewalk will go ahead as planned.

Latest Issues

New Ramp On the Way for Lower Don Trail

A great win for access and advocacy!

If you enjoy the Lower Don Trail, you know how difficult it can be to access – for people using a mobility device, with children in strollers, on bikes or trikes, pushing a bundle buggy or towing a trailer, etc. That’s about to improve, with an accessible ramp to be built at the Riverdale Park pedestrian/cyclist bridge.

This amazing win is the result of several years’ hard work by cycling and pedestrian advocates who collaborated together, found a champion in a local councillor, and engaged residents and the community. The process started in April 2013, when the City of Toronto held a public consultation on the Lower Don Trail Access, Environment + Art Master Plan project. Advocates attended and provided input, including requesting that ramps, rather than simply staircases, be part of the plan to increase accessibility to the Narrows section of the Lower Don Trail (located halfway between trail entrances at Corktown Common and Pottery Road). When the final plan was released by the City of Toronto and the Toronto and Region Conservation Authority in September 2013, advocates were disappointed to learn that new staircases proposed for the bridges at Gerrard Street East and Dundas Street East would not include any ramp. That’s when the hard work began – to get an accessible ramp connection, to better serve the many people for whom stairs are still a barrier.

Fortunately, a coalition of local and city-wide advocates, including Walk Toronto, didn’t give up and kept the pressure on staff and politicians to come up with an accessible solution, which the City finally agreed to in the spring of 2015. The ramp, once it is built, will benefit not only local Riverdale residents but also downtowners who are not well provided with large bodies of green space – Torontonians will have three streetcar line options if they wish to get to the ramp using public transit.

Congratulations are in order to Ward 30 Bikes, the official Cycle Toronto advocacy group for Ward 30, which took the initiative on this project. In April 2014, the group, led by Michael Holloway, authored the report “Creating Accessible Connections: Ramps to the Lower Don Trail at Dundas and Gerrard,” which was endorsed by Walk Toronto, Cycle Toronto Trails Working Group, Ward 28 Cycling Advocacy Group and Ward 29 Bikes. Walk Toronto submitted its own “Lower Don Trail Accessibility” report in August 2014 and posted about this issue at that time.

Kudos are also due to Councillor Paula Fletcher for getting a study on the matter, and to Paul Young at South Riverdale Community Health Centre for assisting the advocates. The Riverside BIA, neighbourhood residents, individuals in local walking/hiking groups, and Cycle Toronto members are among the many others who also made known their support for an accessible ramp.

The work isn’t over. Advocates, including Walk Toronto, continue to be involved as the City prepares a Request for Proposal for the design phase in 2015, with construction slated for 2016. Nevertheless, let’s celebrate this victory, and reflect on what it teaches us to do:

  • Get involved.

  • Collaborate with others, and engage different communities.

  • Find a political champion.

  • Be persistent. Be persistent. Be persistent

Post prepared by Vivien Leong

Latest Issues

Walk Toronto supports speed reduction on local streets in Toronto-East York

On June 22, 2015, Walk Toronto deputed at a special meeting of the Toronto and East York Community Council (TEYCC) that considered a motion to reduce speed limits on all local streets in the district to 30 km/hr.

The motion passed unanimously. Councillors emphasized that the vast majority of their constituents were in favour of slower speeds on their streets. 14 of the 15 public deputants were also in favour (although some wanted additional measures).

TEYCC has final authority over this issue, so this is now policy. However, funding for changing speed signs still has to be finalized.

See Walk Toronto’s submission (PDF)

Latest Issues

Walk Toronto supports boulevard option for Gardiner East

Walk Toronto has sent a letter to City Council supporting the boulevard (remove) option for the Gardiner Expressway east of Jarvis, rather than the “hybrid” option. While a wide boulevard is not ideal for pedestrians, Walk Toronto had decided that it provides more opportunities for good pedestrian spaces along the new street and safer crossing than the current experience of crossing Lake Shore and the Gardiner ramps, which the “hybrid” version would perpetuate.

Read the letter (PDF)

Latest Issues

Improvements needed to 30 km/hr policy

Walk Toronto has submitted a deputation to the Public Works and Infrastructure Committee regarding the “Proposed 30 km/h Speed Limit Policy” being discussed today (Thursday April 9, 2015). The proposed policy specifies conditions for reducing speed limits on local roads to 30 km/hr without having to add traffic calming measures.

The gist of the deputation is that the proposed policy is very restricted. We are concerned that it not interfere with efforts to introduce broader, system-wide speed limit reductions on local streets. We also propose various measures to make the policy easier to implement on a broader range of streets.

Read our deputation (PDF)

Walk Toronto’s Michael Black was interviewed about this issue in the Globe and Mail, and on CBC radio.

Resources

Accessibility and Built Environment Resources

AccessForward: Free Training Modules to meet the training requirements under Ontario’s accessibility laws


AODA’s Accessibility Standards for the Built Environment


Integrated Accessibility Standards Regulation Guidelines: Part 4.1 – Design of Public Spaces Standards


Illustrated Technical Guide to the Accessibility Standard for the Design of Public Spaces


Guidelines for Understanding, Use and Implementation of Accessible Pedestrian Signals (2008, link now dead) (available to purchase from the Transportation Association of Canada)


Original post by Vivien Leong

Latest Issues

Walk Toronto comments on Bay-Bloor pedestrian scramble

Walk Toronto has submitted comments to the Public Works and Infrastructure Committee (PWIC) in response to the proposal to remove the Bay-Bloor pedestrian scramble crossing. The comments emphasize our disappointment at the recommendation and the popularity of pedestrian scramble crossings (as noted in the report itself).

Walk Toronto’s key recommendation is:

Walk Toronto recommends that PWIC direct staff to identify alternative intersections that meet the criteria for pedestrian scramble crossings and begin the process of establishing pedestrian scramble crossings at those intersections as soon as possible. Walk Toronto further recommends that the scramble crossing at Bay and Bloor not be removed until at least one has been installed at an alternative location.

Read Walk Toronto’s full comments (PDF).

The PWIC agenda item, and a link to the City of Toronto report, can be found on the City website.

UPDATE: PWIC approved the removal of the Bay-Bloor pedestrian scramble crossing without the amendment we proposed. It will be voted on at City Council at their March 31st meeting. There is still an opportunity to pass our recommendation at that meeting.

Here are some media articles about this issue in which Walk Toronto was quoted: