Tuesday, November 17, 2020

Bike Lanes on Brimley Road – Why Should You Care?


In late May Toronto Council approved taking two lanes out of Brimley Road and handing these over to the bike lobby. 


The bike lobby told our Councillor Michael Thompson that we needed bike lanes to get to the grocery store, the drug store, the LCBO and Beer store at Eglinton. They told him we needed to get our exercise by riding our bikes up and down Brimley. 


The lanes went in early in July. We’ve had 4 months to see how this is working out. Traffic is only partway back to pre-COVID lockdown ‘normal’ levels. When Brimley is busy we are seeing long lines of traffic forming in the single lane remaining. A single-vehicle stopped to make a left-hand turn into their driveway or their neighbourhood blocks the whole street. Long queues are forming at the traffic signals. 


Why should you care? 


Here are 8 good reasons why everyone in Glen Andrew should care about the Brimley Bike lanes: 


1. Bike lanes on Brimley today are just the start. 


This is just a ‘pilot project’ they snuck in when everyone was totally focused on the COVID emergency. The bike lanes won’t stop at Lawrence. The bike lobby wants to extend these all the way to Steeles. And then do it again on Midland Ave. 


2. Your friends and neighbours who front onto Brimley Road had their right to park and even just to stop in front of their homes cancelled by City Hall. 


There are +\- 200 homes with driveways directly to Brimley between Kingston Road and Lawrence. 


Whatever privileges they had to park or even just to stop in front of their homes before the bike lanes went in, they were cancelled overnight. City work crews took down the old signs and put these up: 




If your daughter parks in the curb lane, where she’s parked for years to bring over the grandkids, maybe deliver some groceries if you can’t get around, she’ll get whacked with a $150.00 fine. 


No-one knows how you get your roof repaired; your furnace replaced or even your lawn care company to come to your home if you live on Brimley. Where do they park?



3. Because practically no-one is using the Brimley bike lanes. 

  • Even in the really good cycling weather of June, July and August. 
  • Even when there was practically zero traffic on Brimley during the COVID lockdown. 
  • Even when the City Hall bike lobby sent out 23,136 full-colour glossy pamphlets to sell their latest scheme. 

4. Because cycling is seasonal. 


Cycling on the really well-used bike lanes downtown where it makes sense drops off by +\-80 % from November through the end of April. 

If there’s almost nobody cycling on Brimley today in great cycling weather, how many people will be pedalling on Brimley in the dark and cold, on snow and ice from November through the end of April? 


5. Maybe you have been able to avoid Brimley Road but those are your friends and neighbours stuck waiting in those queues. 

  • They’re riding the Brimley 21 bus to the subway. 
  • They’re trying to get to and from their homes right on Brimley and in the neighbourhoods on both sides. 
  • Those are our children riding school buses to Knob Hill, Hunters Glen and Charles Gordon public schools south of Lawrence and further south to Anson public school; 
  • They’re waiting for the handicapped access taxi and the WheelTrans van; 
  • They’re wondering how the service trucks can get to their homes to repair their furnace, fix their roof, or deliver the things they’ve ordered online. 


6. Because neither our Councillor Michael Thompson nor the bike lobby at City Hall has answered our question: 


How will snowplows, driveway plows, street sweepers and storm drain vacuum trucks do their jobs with bike lanes hogging the curb lane? 









7. Because a huge proportion of the vehicles going up and down Brimley every weekday belong to Scarborough businesses. 


These companies employ us. They employ our neighbours and kids. 

They help us maintain and improve our homes, deliver food to our stores, deliver what we’ve ordered on line. 


Here are just a few of the companies whose trucks use Brimley Road every day: 













































Not to mention dozens of Atlantic Packaging’s tractor trailers, Crupi Paving heavy haulers and Praxair’s tanker trucks that use Brimley Road every weekday. 



8. Because two years is not “temporary”. 


When the bike lobby at City Hall grabbed two lanes out of Brimley for bicycles in July, they put up signs telling us this was ‘temporary’. 


They told our Councillors they’ll watch how things go and report to our Councillors “in the fourth quarter of 2021.” 


If you know how things work at City Hall, our Councillors won’t get around to these bike lanes until quite likely December 2021. Even if they decided then to remove the bike lanes, it’s not likely to happen until the spring of 2022. 21-24 months of this nonsense spanning two winters is not ‘temporary’. 





Make no mistake about it: 

  • The bike lobby at City Hall, like a thief in the COVID night, grabbed half the capacity of Brimley Road for themselves while we were all busy trying to stay safe. 
  • They grabbed both sides of Huntingwood: most of the 321 homes with driveways to Huntingwood lost the right to park or even just to stop in front of their homes with no consultation. 
  • The bike lobby has their sights set on the rest of Brimley… right through Glen Andrew and all the way to Steeles. 
  • Then they’ll do the same thing to Midland from Kingston Road to Steeles. 


Unless you speak up. 


Unless Mike Thompson hears from you that this is not acceptable. 


Here’s our message to Councillor Thompson: 


1. Remove the bike lanes from Brimley Road immediately…before the snow flies: 

  • Take out the pylons. 
  • Paint over the markings. 
  • Put black bags over all the special signs you erected. 

2. Consider reopening the bike lanes next summer…June, July and August…AFTER some genuine discussion with all the homeowners who front onto Brimley, the communities on either side and the businesses who depend on Brimley Road. 


Join us. 


Tell Michael Thompson you support Glen Andrew’s request. 


Call him: 416-397-9274 

Email him: councillor_thompson@toronto.ca 

Write to him: 100 Queen St W Suite B24, Toronto, ON M5H 2N2 


Lorne Ross 

For the Glen Andrew Community Association 



NOTE

Glen Andrew Community Association supports cycling as a good weather recreational activity. 
We have sent the City all sorts of ideas on how to improve safe and attractive cycling using our parks, ravines, trails and hydro fields. 


Wednesday, September 2, 2020

Need a little help cleaning up?



That Dog Company

A Dog waste pick-up & complete yard sanitizing service. 

Our service professionals will completely clean your property of all the dog waste & then ensure your yard is clean & safe to use by sanitizing, decontaminating & deodorizing with our highly effective spray of microbes & enzymes that quickly eliminates odours & rapidly breaks down dog waste residue. 

Your lawn will be clean & safe to enjoy immediately. 

Your Safety is our #1 Priority.


Remember: When you choose That Dog Company, you’re helping dogs get adopted. That’s because we donate at least 25% of our profits to local shelters and dog rescue groups.


We’d love to connect with you! For anything and everything dog-related (PSAs, Links, jokes, memes, assorted fun), check out our social media pages: Facebook, Instagram, & Twitter


Thank you,

Justin McLeod

“If there are no dogs in heaven, then when I die I want to go where they went.” – Will Rogers


Phone: 416-272-9587

Web: www.thatdogcompany.com

Email: justin@thatdogcompany.com or info@thatdogcompany.com

Monday, August 31, 2020

New Physical Farmers' Market in Scarborough



Scarborough Farmers' Market (physical location)



When: Tuesdays from September 1 to Tuesday October 6.


Hours: 10:00 A:M – 3:00 P:M

Where: Hand of God Dog Park 



on the south side of Borough Drive across from the Scarborough Civic Centre
  • Farm fresh produce
  • Corn
  • Maple syrup
  • Pepper Sauces
  • Samosas
  • Sausages
  • Skincare essentials 

    ...and more!

Please support our local producers and entrepreneurs!


scarboroughfarmersmarket.ca

courtardfarmersmarket.ca

(Online ordering not required for this market)


Wednesday, August 12, 2020

Open call for volunteer help


We need your help




In our last two newsletters, twice by email and our blog, we have asked that a few of our neighbours would give us a hand with some of the tasks that need doing in order to keep the Glen Andrew Community Association working properly. So far only two neighbours have come forward and have taken on a task.

We still need one volunteer to set up the meetings at St. Andrews Church. This includes:
  • Reserving the hall at the church.
  • Setting up the hall for the meeting and put everything back in place after the meeting.
  • Be at the door yourself and have the guests sign in.
  • Contact the other helpers who we have on file to help with the sign in and the sale of memberships.

We will also need one or two volunteers to help with organizing and set up for yearly litter clean-up day. This includes:
  • Contacting the helpers we have on file to help with the sign in
  • Handing out gloves and garbage bags
  • one or two people to make and serve coffee, tea, soft drinks, muffins and donuts.
  • Put up the clean-up day posters in our neighbourhood and order supplies.
  • Show the volunteers what areas need to be cleaned of litter.

A new newsletter editor is also needed. This includes collecting the information for the newsletter and get the newsletter ready for print.

We do have a volunteer who will have the newsletter printed and delivered to the street reps for delivery in our neighbourhood.

Once you decide to help us, please send me an email or call me. Contact info can be found here: 
http://glenandrewcommunityassociation.blogspot.com/p/contact-us.html

We will meet with you and explain the task in more detail and answer any questions you may have.

Iain McLeod,
President


Monday, July 20, 2020

How Effective Are Masks? - video

An excellent video that simply, clearly demonstrates why you should wear a mask when you are in circumstances that do not permit you to maintain that 6 feet (2 meter) distance.





Glen Andrew Community Association does not warrant the performance, effectiveness or applicability of any sites listed or linked to in any shared content. The shared content is for informational purposes only and not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health providers with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition. 

Wednesday, July 8, 2020

Scarborough Farmer’s Market




Scarborough Farmer’s Market


Town Centre Plaza at the corner of McCowan Rd. and Milner Avenue 

(Winners and Princess Auto)




Saturday 4 - 6 pm

Starting: Saturday, July 4th
Ending: Saturday, October 10th

Online ordering for 
curbside pick up or delivery 
by midnight Wednesday



We have just been informed that there will be a Farmer’s Market set up in the Town Centre Plaza which is at the corner of McCowan Road and Milner Avenue, on Saturday beginning on July 4th and ending on Saturday, October 10th.

Orders must be received by midnight Wednesday for a Saturday pick up at the Town Centre Location. 

There are other locations and pick up times available and a full list of what is offered on scarboroughfarmersmarket.ca

Your comments would be appreciated by your Glen Andrew Community Association.


Iain McLeod
President

Monday, June 15, 2020

Alternative Route Suggestions for Proposed Bike Lanes on Brimley Rd.




Thomson Park to Bluffers Park

One of the rationales put forward for taking two lanes out of Brimley is to allow a cyclist to travel between Thomson Park and Buffers Park.

We’re not too sure how many people would actually make that trip, even on a nice sunny dry day, but there is an attractive alternative route which does NOT put cyclists on busy arterial roads, nor does it cross hundreds of residential driveways, not does it take lanes away from heavy industry south of Danforth Road.

Below is an air photo of central Scarborough from Ellesmere down to the Lake Ontario shoreline.

In orange are existing multi-purpose paths separated from arterial road traffic. In red are the Brimorton bike lanes painted on the roadway.

The orange paths in the air photo run through the following parks and ravines:

  • The Gatineau-Meadowway-Pan Am path systems;
  • Birkdale Ravine;
  • Thomson Park;
  • The Highland Creek ravine system;
  • The small branch of the Highland Creek that connects Knob Hill Park on the east side of Brimley with McCowan Park; and
  • The 2 km diagonal path system south of Eglinton between the Bellamy GO Station and Brimley Road. It runs in the former Scarborough Expressway lands. I don’t know if it has a name so I’ll call it the Expressway Path.

To connect these with safe walking-cycling paths, there are two ‘missing links’.

  1. About 0.75 km through Hague park; and
  2. About 1.1 km south down McCowan Road from McCowan Park to the Expressway Path; ...which takes you back to Brimley south of the heavy industries.

We leave it to Councillor Crawford and his communities to decide if they want to continue a painted bike lane system on Brimley or McCowan south from the Expressway Path

McCowan Road from McCowan Park to EglintonIt’s a dead end. It operates as a local street carrying very little traffic compared to an arterial like Brimley.
No TTC buses operate on this part of McCowan.
There are only 2 homes with driveway to this part of McCowan.
It is paved today as a two-lane street but the City owns a 27m wide right of way. There should be lots of room to build a separate cycle track down to Eglinton.
McCowan south from Eglinton
It’s four lanes and in my experience, this part of McCowan is not heavily travelled. If there is no feasible way to build a bike path separate from the travelled lanes under the CNR-GO line here, the impact on traffic of taking two lanes should be far less than taking two lanes out of 4 kilometres of Brimley.

The Bellamy 9 TTC bus runs on McCowan south of Eglinton. The latest data available to us shows that this bus carries less than half the passengers that ride the Brimley 21 bus every day.

If you believe a lot of people want to ride bicycles down and back up the severe slope of Brimley below Kingston Road and you think that slope is safe for all ages/stages of cyclists, then proceed with that part of your plan.

Advantages of our Hague Park-McCowan Road proposal:

  1. Builds on/ connects to the existing Highland Creek and Expressway path system;
  2. Displaces very little traffic from busy arterial roads;
  3. Does not interfere with busy TTC bus routes;
  4. No conflict with heavy truck traffic from industrial operations;
  5. Crosses 2 residential driveways from Thomson Park south to McCowan District Park and back to Brimley south of Skagway.
  6. Puts more people on the Expressway path which increases safety for everyone.
  7. Connects to McCowan District Park:

  • Scarborough’s only outdoor skating trail
  • Scarborough’s second outdoor skating rink
  • Sports fields
  • Splash pads
  • Children’s play areas
  • Picnic areas





Below is how it lays out. Red lines are existing bike lanes painted on roads. Orange lines are existing pedestrian-cycle paths in Scarborough parks and ravines.



Lorne Ross for Glen Andrew Community Association