Sunday, June 21, 2026
ADVT 
National

Ottawa Gets $1Billion In Provincial Funding For Light Rail Transit

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 Jun, 2016 12:37 PM
  • Ottawa Gets $1Billion In Provincial Funding For Light Rail Transit
OTTAWA — The Ontario government is putting more than $1 billion toward a light rail transit project in Ottawa, including a connection to the airport.
 
The funding for the second phase of the project will add 30 kilometres of rail, with 19 new stations, and will partly fund a link to the airport and an extension to Orleans.
 
Construction is expected to start in 2018 and service would begin in 2023.
 
Premier Kathleen Wynne says the "major leap forward in the modernization of Ottawa's transit infrastructure" will create 1,000 full-time jobs, make commuting easier and drive emissions down.
 
The announcement is one of several transit funding announcements the province has made this week, with money coming from the Liberal government's promised spending of $160 billion over 12 years on infrastructure.
 
Ontario is putting $150 million toward planning and designing a Toronto downtown relief subway line, as well as $55 million toward planning for a subway extension northward.

MORE National ARTICLES

Abbotsford Reviews Plans For Cabin Village For Homeless Residents

Abbotsford Reviews Plans For Cabin Village For Homeless Residents
The City of Abbotsford is taking another look at a plan to house the homeless in a village of tiny cabins.

Abbotsford Reviews Plans For Cabin Village For Homeless Residents

Newfoundland And Labrador Responds To Youth Overdose, Suicide Deaths

Newfoundland And Labrador Responds To Youth Overdose, Suicide Deaths
Health officials in Newfoundland and Labrador are being urged to step up mental health services and teach students how to handle overdoses after the deaths last year of two young people.

Newfoundland And Labrador Responds To Youth Overdose, Suicide Deaths

Nunavut Minister Paul Okalik Quits His Post Over Contentious Plan To Open Liquor Store

Nunavut Minister Paul Okalik Quits His Post Over Contentious Plan To Open Liquor Store
Nunavut's minister of health and justice has quit cabinet over the territory's contentious plan to open a liquor story in Iqaluit.

Nunavut Minister Paul Okalik Quits His Post Over Contentious Plan To Open Liquor Store

Former Toronto Mayor Rob Ford Returns To Hospital For More Chemotherapy

Former Toronto mayor Rob Ford has returned to hospital to continue his cancer treatment

Former Toronto Mayor Rob Ford Returns To Hospital For More Chemotherapy

Mooching Mallards Encouraged By Free Food Create Problems In Cranbrook

Mooching Mallards Encouraged By Free Food Create Problems In Cranbrook
City of Cranbrook spokesman Chris Zettel says a wildlife education program is being expanded, in hopes of training residents not to feed the mallards, which have flocked to two mall parking lots in the southeastern B.C., city.

Mooching Mallards Encouraged By Free Food Create Problems In Cranbrook

Canada's Gold Reserve Almost Empty As Ottawa Unloads Last Of Its Stash

Canada's Gold Reserve Almost Empty As Ottawa Unloads Last Of Its Stash
The Canadian government has nearly completed a gradual sell-off of its gold reserves as its holdings of the precious metal now amount to just a few dozen ounces.

Canada's Gold Reserve Almost Empty As Ottawa Unloads Last Of Its Stash