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One year later, work on Bradford bypass begins

'It’s something that has been moved up the priority list,' York-Simcoe MPP Caroline Mulroney says of long-awaited project
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Minister of Transportation Caroline Mulroney, right, and Ontario Premier Doug Ford talk with constituents in Bradford last year in this file photo. Miriam King/Bradford Today

Behind the scenes this summer, even as she deals with the provincial government’s ongoing response to COVID-19, Minister of Transportation Caroline Mulroney continues to push the Bradford bypass forward.

“I spoke to the premier just yesterday about the bypass,” the York-Simcoe MPP said over the phone Thursday afternoon.

“I showed it to him on a map," she added, signifying how much further ahead the project stands following her big announcement this time last year that the bypass was back in the province’s capital plan.

And Mulroney has some good news to share: engineering and design fieldwork started this summer and public consultations on the route alignment should begin in “a matter of weeks."

“Assignment for that work was awarded this summer,” she said. "There will be formal public consultation that will be occurring… It may have been a little delayed due to COVID, but there will be public consultations, municipal consultations and additional stakeholder engagement.

“It couldn’t happen fast enough for me,” Mulroney added with a laugh.

She pointed to the government’s push to “modernize the process to get highways built faster” while still “following the rules” to ensure the environmental assessment completed in 2003 is “reinitiated” and “renewed," and that the “design and fieldwork is done in the right way."

"We have to really update the highway design so it meets current standards, and we have a lot of survey work that still needs to be done, but it is underway," said Mulroney, adding "it’s something that has been moved up the priority list.”

All that said, “we’re trying to push forward (and) push ahead with a timeline because I know people are excited about it, and we don’t want to delay,” she said.

It’s been a long time coming.

In 2003, the provincial government under then-premier Dalton McGuinty shelved the plan for a highway connecting the Highway 404 extension north of East Gwillimbury with Highway 400 just north of Bradford.

In 2014, Bradford West Gwillimbury Mayor Rob Keffer was elected on a plan to “get the bypass back on track." He and council worked to unite York Region, Simcoe County and area mayors to push in a concerted way to impress upon the government under premier Kathleen Wynne that the bypass was needed.