Province will build S.W. ring road despite councillors' misgivings - Action News
Home WebMail Sunday, November 24, 2024, 01:30 AM | Calgary | -12.2°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Calgary

Province will build S.W. ring road despite councillors' misgivings

The province says it will go ahead with the southwest leg of Calgarys ring road despite the misgivings of some city council members.

4 Calgary council members say $5 billion cost would be better invested in other projects

Ring road reservations

10 years ago
Duration 2:40
The province says it will go ahead with the southwest leg of Calgarys ring road despite the misgivings of some city council members.

The province says it will go ahead with the southwest leg of Calgarys ring road despite the misgivings of some city council members.

Four councillors arequestioning the wisdom of the province spending $5 billion to complete the ring road, arguing the city has more pressing transportation priorities.

The $5 billion cost estimation includesbuilding the road, consultations for the project, the land agreement with Tsuu T'ina Nation,interchanges connecting Calgary and maintaining the road for 30 years.

The councillors Druh Farrell, Gian-Carlo Carra, Brian Pincott and Evan Woolley are also unhappy the city will need to spend $133 million to build connections to the freeway, which will run along the west side of Calgary.

The southwest portion of the ring road will stretch from Highway22xto Highway 8 along the city's western edge and through land that now belongs to the TsuuTina Nation, and then continue north along the101stStreet corridor to the Trans-Canada Highway.

The ring road holdouts say a north-southeastLRTline from Harvest Hillsthrough the coreout to Seton would be a better use of the money.

But design work on the final leg of Calgarys ring road is already well underway, said Nancy Beasley Hosker with Alberta Transportation.

The province is doing its job in providing safe travel corridors and ensuring market access for all Albertans, she added.

Several city councillors fully support the ring road project, in part because they believe it will take pressure off congested corridors such as Sarcee Trail and 14th Street southwest.

Several Calgary council members are questioning whether building the final, southwest leg of the ring road, is a good use of up to $5 billion. (Government of Alberta)