Wednesday, February 11, 2026
ADVT 
National

Ottawa to provide $1.5 billion for Metro Vancouver's transit service over a decade

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 Mar, 2025 04:11 PM
  • Ottawa to provide $1.5 billion for Metro Vancouver's transit service over a decade

The federal government has committed more than $1.5 billion over 10 years for Metro Vancouver's beleaguered transit network, but a public transit advocate says it still leaves a massive funding gap. 

The Department of Housing, Infrastructure and Communities announced the funding deal for TransLink Friday, touting it as the first metro-region agreement under the new Canada Public Transit Fund.

The funding from 2026 to 2036 is in addition to $663 million announced by Ottawa in January for TransLink infrastructure over the same period.

Denis Agar, executive director of Movement Metro Vancouver Transit Riders, said the funding falls far short of what the system actually needs. 

"The federal government does not fund transit operating expenses, and that's what Translink's big problem is," Agar said. "They keep making announcements at a time when it seems like they're filling a need in local municipalities, and people like me and even TransLink have to keep going out and saying, 'This doesn't help us.'"

Agar, an urban planner who used to work for TransLink, said the federal government has consistently been doling out about $3 billion a year for transit capital projects across the country, "but that's such a drop in the bucket compared with the need that exists in this country." 

He said overcrowding issues in urban centres such as Vancouver, Montreal and Toronto are now spilling over to smaller communities. 

"We're seeing people left behind by full buses now in Halifax and Kelowna and Castlegar and I really think that that means it's a federal problem," he said. "We just need the federal government to play a much bigger role in transit funding and actually start funding transit operations."

TransLink CEO Kevin Quinn said in the statement announcing the funding that it looks forward to continuing its partnership with Ottawa through the new deal, and it continues to work with all levels of government to expand transit to meet the region's needs.

Quinn has said repeatedly in the past that TransLink faces an annual operational shortfall of $600 million starting next year, and without funding to address the gap, transit services would face "significant cuts."

Translink operates commuter trains, the SeaBus, and trolley and regular buses, providing 5.5 million transit service hours every year. It also has its own Transit Police department. 

Last March, the B.C. government gave TransLink an injection of $479 million in provincial funding to maintain services and fares.

The Canada Public Transit Fund, announced by the federal government last year, is set to start doling out $3 billion a year beginning in 2026.

The federal government also announced Friday a contribution of $189 million over 10 years for BC Transit, a provincial Crown corporation serving communities outside Metro Vancouver.

Agar said transit funding in the region is currently being hashed out between mayors and the provincial government to fill TransLink's "big budget deficit," and his non-profit is planning a rally in Metrotown Station in Burnaby on Sunday to urge policy makers to "go beyond" the bare minimum. 

He said transit service levels need to be increased immediately, "or we're just going to see overcrowding reach absolute crisis levels. I mean, it's already crisis."

"It's just going to keep getting worse if we don't increase transit service, like, this month," he said. 

MORE National ARTICLES

No Canadian soldiers assigned to border enforcement, minister says

No Canadian soldiers assigned to border enforcement, minister says
Public Safety Minister David McGuinty says there is no plan to send Canadian soldiers to the Canada-U.S. border. In a bid to head off crippling tariffs threatened by U.S. President Donald Trump, Canada has committed to tasking 10,000 frontline personnel with protecting the border.

No Canadian soldiers assigned to border enforcement, minister says

Gang leader and another man charged after shooting in Fort Nelson, B.C.

Gang leader and another man charged after shooting in Fort Nelson, B.C.
A man well known to police and identified in the courts as a gang leader faces charges in connection with a shooting in Fort Nelson, B.C.  Police say Jarrod Bacon has been charged with aggravated assault, while John Chasse faces an assault charge in connection with the shooting that sent one person to hospital last Wednesday.

Gang leader and another man charged after shooting in Fort Nelson, B.C.

B.C. human rights commissioner wants study of police in schools after board's firing

B.C. human rights commissioner wants study of police in schools after board's firing
British Columbia's human rights commissioner says the provincial government has effectively made police liaison programs mandatory in schools with its firing of the Greater Victoria school board, while failing to provide a factual basis for the decision. Kasari Govender says in a letter to Education Minister Lisa Beare and Public Safety Minister Gary Begg that failure to fund research into the matter is contrary to the government's human rights obligations "and undermines its stated values to combat racism."

B.C. human rights commissioner wants study of police in schools after board's firing

Man injured in avalanche on Vancouver Island, taken by rescue helicopter to hospital

Man injured in avalanche on Vancouver Island, taken by rescue helicopter to hospital
A man has been seriously injured in an avalanche on Vancouver Island and required the rescue helicopter to fly him directly to hospital for treatment. Metro Vancouver-based North Shore Rescue says in a social media post that the man was partially buried in a slide in the backcountry near the Mount Cain ski area on northern Vancouver Island on Sunday. 

Man injured in avalanche on Vancouver Island, taken by rescue helicopter to hospital

Drug deaths in B.C. drop 13 per cent, hitting four-year low of 2,253

Drug deaths in B.C. drop 13 per cent, hitting four-year low of 2,253
The BC Coroners Service says toxic drug deaths in British Columbia were down 13 per cent last year, with the toll now lower than any year since 2020. Chief Coroner Dr. Jatinder Baidwan says the decline is consistent with elsewhere in Canada and internationally, but doesn't mitigate the fact that 2,253 people died of overdoses in B.C. last year, or the grief felt by their loved ones.

Drug deaths in B.C. drop 13 per cent, hitting four-year low of 2,253

Metro Vancouver to stay cold for at least a week with wintry road conditions

Metro Vancouver to stay cold for at least a week with wintry road conditions
This week's wintry blast of snow in Metro Vancouver will likely remain on the ground, with below-average temperatures forecasted well into next week. Environment Canada meteorologist Alyssa Charbonneau says while temperatures may moderate slightly during the daytime over the weekend, whatever's melted will likely refreeze at night.

Metro Vancouver to stay cold for at least a week with wintry road conditions