Toronto is looking for a 'transit czar' to speed up city's expansion plans
City council has approved a long list of projects it wants to build
Toronto's transit system needs a czar, Mayor John Tory announced Thursday.
Tory, fresh off a resounding re-election, says the city will create a transit expansion office that will be the "single point of contact" for city divisions, the TTC, Metrolinx and other levels of government working on projects in Toronto.
The transit czar's role, Tory said, is to smash down any obstacle to getting transit built, while also ensuring billion-dollar projects stay on budget.
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Wait, isn't this what the TTC does?
Not quite, said Tory, who called the city's transit agency just one important partner in getting future projects up and running — council has a long list, including: six SmartTrack stations, the Scarborough subway extension, the downtown relief line and a number of light rail projects throughout Toronto.
"Council has approved Toronto's transit network plan, voters have endorsed it and this office will be tasked with making sure every project in that plan, including the relief line, is completed on time and on budget," Tory said in a news release.
Tory wants new transit office to be a “lean” operation with a senior executive at the helm — not some “bureaucratic swamp.”
—@LaurenPelley
Transportation was the top issue ahead of October's election, according to the tens of thousands of people who used CBC Toronto's civic engagement tool, Vote Compass.
The Ontario government is also looking at the option of uploading the TTC's subway system.
Tory said the city is immediately launching a search for the person who will become czar (the official title is "executive director" according to a city news release). It's also unclear how much setting up a transit expansion office will cost.