this post was submitted on 22 Nov 2024
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If bike lanes were removed then you might have an argument.
Than you could sue the municipality for not installing them on other roads. Thats not how liability works.
They are just getting ahead of the courts being overcome by frivolous lawsuits that will go nowhere.
I don't see the problem. Right to bike seems reasonable to me.
And you are free to cycle on almost any road still are you not? They are just getting rid of dedicated lanes on some roads. I haven’t seen anything preventing cycling itself.
Imagine the provincial government demanding that municipalities remove all stoplights because drivers don't want to wait, and then saying "you can't sue us if you crash at an intersection that used to have a stoplight." The province knowingly forced the removal of a safety measure, and in doing so must accept liability for the consequences of that action.
Legally, the question is whether the removal of separated bike lanes in Toronto meets the criteria set by the Supreme Court of Canada, originally in 2002 and again this summer, for legislation that is either clearly unconstitutional or "was passed in bad faith or an abuse of power." Unfortunately, our laws allow the provincial government to interfere in municipal affairs however it wants, even street by street. Toronto does not enjoy the same powers of self-governance as most large cities in the developed world so Ford's decision is neither unconstitutional, nor an abuse of power, at least in the formal legal sense.
If the City of Toronto or a third party sued the province over the removal of bike lanes, in theory the decision would depend on whether Ford acted in 'bad faith', which effectively means that provincial courts will make a subjective claim about the intent of the law/lawmakers. This subjective interpretation of the facts is due to the vague wording of the Supreme Court's decision, which SC Justice Rowe warned against in his 2024 dissent.
However, recent judicial history and the court's piecemeal decision-making suggests that Ford would succeed in court. Only a few years ago, both the Ontario Court of Appeal and SC upheld the provincial government's right to interfere in the city's municipal election and halve the number of city councilors during the election itself. They justified his interference in our local self-governance by noting his constitutional right to do so, ignoring the question of bad faith entirely (much less the legitimacy of our democratic process). There's simply no reason to believe these same justices would rule differently today.
Those of us who support bike lanes must find other ways to address this interference, not from within the system itself.
This goes so far beyond bike lanes, which is a manufactured controversy. This is Ontario; he's going to gain more votes than he loses by demonizing cyclists, and he knows it. Unless you are proposing violence, you must mean that we have to vote him out. If that's the case, we can't take the bait and we have to move the spotlight back onto what Ford doesn't want his base thinking about.
Let's get rid of sidewalks, too.
Nothing preventing you from walking down the middle of a road.
Hell, let's just get rid of lanes, and roads, then anyone can drive anywhere anytime in any direction at any speed!
Freedom!!!
It's different when you have something and then take it away. You have that safety feature and then it's removed. I don't think it could be argued successfully, but it could be tried. This law is probably just trying to save everyone the hassle and cost that goes with it.