Use barges to ease Massey Tunnel congestion, says B.C. longshoreman - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 12:06 PM | Calgary | -8.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

Use barges to ease Massey Tunnel congestion, says B.C. longshoreman

A local union president says the practice of short sea shipping is needed to reduce congestion at the George Massey Tunnel before building a new bridge.

'This would make everything easier for everyone, including the truck drivers,' says Terry Engler

A 2015 report found one in four trucks shipping cargo from Port Metro Vancouver could be replaced by short sea shipping on a barge. (Wave Point Consulting)

A Vancouver union president says building a proposed 10-lane bridge isn't the only solution to easing traffic congestion at the George Massey Tunnel.

Instead, longshoreman TerryEngler said limitingtruck traffic coming from nearby port terminals south of the FraserRiver is key to reducingtraffic.

Engler, who ispresident of the InternationalLongshoreand Warehouse Union Local 400,made the comments to On the Coast guest host Gloria Macarenko.

"This would make everything easier for everyone, including the truck drivers, because they don't make money whenthey'restuck in traffic," saidEngler.

Engler'scomments come on the heels of remarks fromDelta Mayor Lois Jackson, whorecently renewed her support of a proposedbridge to replace the tunnel.

Jackson is urging the incoming NDP provincial government to support a bridge, which wasbacked by the outgoing Liberal government.

Traffic bottleneck

The Liberals argued that the Massey Tunnel, which runs beneath the Fraser River and links Richmond and Delta, has become a traffic bottleneck and is seismically unsound.

However, most Metro Vancouver mayors have spoken out against buildinga new bridge.

Engler's solution hinges on an idea called short sea shipping, a practice currently used throughout Quebec and Europe. It involvesusing barges to ship products rather than trucks.

Listen to the full interview with TerryEngler:

"You build a terminal where the ship docks and you also build a terminal that would unload barges," saidEngler.

"Instead of the scenario now where the trucks go and pick up the containers and drive across the city, over bridges and tunnels and block all the traffic, it would be on barges."

Engler said by using the Lower Mainland's easily navigable water ways, the barges could transport more than 100 containers per vessel.

He saidthe barges could move goods from the port in the Fraser River to municipalities in the region through a network of unloading terminals.

From theterminals, Engler said trucks could then transport theshipments to theirfinal destinations such as stores or warehouses.

Port backs bridge

He says short sea shipping would significantlyreduce the distance the trucks would have to drive and in turn reduce congestion.

The George Massey Tunnel is a major highway tunnel in Metro Vancouver through which thousands of cars pass every day. (CBC )

CBC asked the Port of Vancouver to comment on Engler's short sea shipping proposal.

In a statement, it saidit supports the proposed bridge and noted that much of the traffic in the tunnel includes trucks travelling to and from the United States, businesses outside of the Lower Mainland and large amounts of commuters.

"In general, we are supportive of the project [the bridge]because it will help to ease traffic congestion, including trucks travelling to and from the U.S. as well as port terminals," saidthe statement.

But Engler said the value of short sea shipping is undeniable.

"We have one of the best places in the world for navigable waters," said Engler. "We should use them safely and properly ... This is a way that would make more sense than building more bridges and having more trucks driving."

With files from On the Coast