Alberta Premier Smith says she wants Calgary Green Line to proceed as first pitched
CBC
Alberta Premier Danielle Smith says she's committed to Calgary's multi-billion dollar Green Line light rail transit project, but as it was originally envisioned.
Speaking to reporters on Wednesday, Smith declined to say how much her government is now willing to fund.
But she said she is concerned the line is getting shorter while its budget has ballooned from the original price tag of $4.5 billion.
Smith called the Green Line "the incredible shrinking project," and that it needs a complete "rethink" to be more cost-effective.
"It would cost $20 billion to build that entire line at the per kilometre rate we're seeing now. That is the kind of project that could bankrupt a city," said Smith in Lloydminster, Sask.
"I think we just have to do it a different way."
The premier was making her first public comments on the Green Line since Transportation Minister Devin Dreeshen announced last week the province will pull its $1.53 billion in funding from the $6.2-billion transit project if the city doesn't change course.
The city's current city council approved an updated, shortened line in July with an added $700 million in costs.
Calgary Mayor Jyoti Gondek has said that in light of the province's decision, the city now can't afford to build the line and the province needs to assume the financial risk.
Gondek has said she met with the premier earlier this week to say what the province wants won't work. City council is set to meet next week to hear advice on how to abandon the project and offload the costs and delivery onto the province.
Smith, like Dreeshen, said the province is opposed to tunnelling underground for downtown stops as per the latest city plans. Her government also wants to see the rail line go farther into south Calgary.
Dreeshen in a recent interview, said if the city rejects the new alignment proposals, now expected from an engineering firm chosen by the province by the end of the year, the rail line will be on the shelf indefinitely.
If the city votes to try to wash its hands of the financial responsibility next week, Dreeshen suggested there's another long battle ahead.
"Then it goes to the lawyers, and we'll have to assess whatever they come up with at that time," said Dreeshen in a Sept. 6 interview.
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