And that would be…? "It would be about what our next step is and (if) we unwind the process. It's an option—one we want to avoid—but an option."
The EA will be completed by December 2008, DRIC officials said at the press conference. It will then be submitted to the Ontario Environment Ministry -- which could take up to eight months to review it -- and clear a number of other regulatory hurdles. So, in all likelihood, shovels may not break ground until late 2009 or even 2010.
Francis suspects DRIC's latest announcement to increase the tunnel coverage by half a kilometer was a stunt to take some wind out the city's pro-GreenLink campaign. By hinting that the Windsor-Essex Parkway moves closer in line with GreenLink, officials thought they could appease the latter plan's supporters, he claims.
"Anybody that was there will tell you that it was a dog and pony show intended to quell GreenLink support."
It's no real surprise that DRIC eventually dismissed GreenLink. In recent months, high-ranking Ontario Liberals openly called for DRIC to officially endorse its own Parkway plan. Meanwhile, the agency itself recently questioned the cost projections for GreenLink, claiming the city's $1.7 billion estimate is about a $1 billion short.
Francis counters that there isn't anything wrong with the city's peer-reviewed cost analysis, which has been public for months. "They can come out and make all the claims they want, but they have no support behind their own claims."
The mayor suspects some politicians at Queen's Park are fearful of setting a precedent with the more elaborate GreenLink design. "Then there's Sarnia and Fort Erie (to consider) … But Windsor is different," he explains. "Nowhere else across Ontario does (border traffic) slice through an urban environment because the border is 11 km away from the main highway. (Windsor) didn't create the problem. Now it's time to fix it."