40 lines
3.7 KiB
Markdown
40 lines
3.7 KiB
Markdown
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title: "Alberta transportation minister wants bike lanes gone, critics say stay in your lane"
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source: "https://ca.finance.yahoo.com/news/transportation-minister-calls-edmonton-cancel-203122004.html?guccounter=1&guce_referrer=aHR0cHM6Ly9kdWNrZHVja2dvLmNvbS8&guce_referrer_sig=AQAAAAyZ2KQuBo1TJVnbYsj9NFR4z_nThXVM9JMvAwQKCfQgU6IzRiOTtfIo0fGXEzuLKgcsVBiwkKeZVlpK-eN20ITlthgk81QgSK7-HkjoExRQiPD344J5PwH6tHhgcLFnCwBx2GfkelAnHzgdOIK_XAR3jVNm-oZ27gcbt2cPYh51"
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author:
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- "[[Yahoo Finance]]"
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published: 2025-04-17
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created: 2025-05-10
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description: "EDMONTON — Alberta's transportation minister is calling on the province's two major cities to remove bike lanes from key roadways, prompting critics to say the government is overstepping and making an issue out of nothing."
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tags:
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- "clippings"
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---
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[Alberta transportation minister wants bike lanes gone, critics say stay in your lane](https://ca.finance.yahoo.com/news/transportation-minister-calls-edmonton-cancel-203122004.html?guccounter=1&guce_referrer=aHR0cHM6Ly9kdWNrZHVja2dvLmNvbS8&guce_referrer_sig=AQAAAAyZ2KQuBo1TJVnbYsj9NFR4z_nThXVM9JMvAwQKCfQgU6IzRiOTtfIo0fGXEzuLKgcsVBiwkKeZVlpK-eN20ITlthgk81QgSK7-HkjoExRQiPD344J5PwH6tHhgcLFnCwBx2GfkelAnHzgdOIK_XAR3jVNm-oZ27gcbt2cPYh51)
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EDMONTON — Alberta's transportation minister is calling on the province's two major cities to remove bike lanes from key roadways, prompting critics to say the government is overstepping and making an issue out of nothing.
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Devin Dreeshen says he's trying to avoid clashes with the government's goal of expanding road networks, as he blames bike lanes for traffic congestion and obstructing work to build the infrastructure needed for Alberta's growing population.
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"When we are putting money towards projects to add and expand lanes to help accommodate the growth pressures that we've seen here in the province, we want to make sure that municipalities are doing the same thing," the minister said in an interview Thursday.
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"When we see that municipalities are doing the opposite and are reducing and eliminating driving lanes for bike lanes, that obviously has the opposite effect of being able to accommodate for traffic growth across our two major cities."
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Dreeshen also said he's looking to meet with councillors from Edmonton and Calgary to review bike lane spending.
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The minister's comments came after he posted a video and letter to an Edmonton councillor on social media outlining his request.
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His letter specifically called for the cancellation of a multi-year plan to build bike lanes over a few dozen blocks on 132 Avenue on Edmonton's north side.
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Dreeshen wrote in the letter that the project will have a negative impact on the "provincial road network," as it comes at the expense of two lanes of vehicle traffic. Construction began two years ago to repave the road and replace sidewalks, curbs and street lights.
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While the province didn't contribute any dollars to the nearly $96-million project, Dreeshen said the United Conservative Party government should have a say because it provides funding for other municipal roads.
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Dreeshen, in the video, also said bike lanes in the cities aren't being used enough to justify the cost and are taking up space meant for drivers, buses and emergency vehicles.
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"Reducing road capacity on major corridors isn't responsible planning," Dreeshen said. "It's a recipe for congestion delays and gridlock."
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Dreeshen couldn't provide examples of which bike lanes or projects in Calgary he'd like to see removed or cancelled. But he said there are four other bike lanes in Edmonton that fit the bill -- two in the downtown core, and lanes west and north of downtown.
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"We haven't had that same level of digging yet on the Calgary side," he said.
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Try again. |