Montreal

Saint-Laurent mayor pushing for extension to Metro's Orange line

Alan DeSousa, borough mayor of Saint-Laurent, is asking the provincial government to extend the Metro’s Orange metro line so it could connect to the recently proposed light rail network.

Mayor Alan DeSousa wants extension to link borough to newly proposed light rail network

Saint-Laurent borough mayor Alan DeSousa wants the Metro's Orange extended to the Bois-Franc commuter station. (Charles Contant/CBC)

Alan DeSousa, borough mayor of Saint-Laurent, is asking the provincial government to extend the Metro's Orange metro line so it could connect to the recently proposed light rail network.

DeSousa wants the Orange line to extend two kilometres up to the Bois-Franc commuter train station, he wrote in a letter to Quebec Transportation Minister Jacques Daoust Friday.

DeSousa has long requested the Orange line be extended to better serve the borough, which includes a key industrial park near Montreal's Trudeau Airport.

He added that the light rail project proposed by Quebec's Caisse de dépôt et placement is currently only slated to connect to one metro station, Gare Centrale, which experts and opposition politicians have also noted as a flaw in the ambitious plan.

The Bois-Franc commuter station is slated to be included in the new ambitious light rail project envisioned by the Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec. (Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec)
For DeSousa, the extension would bring much needed public transit to the borough.

"We think a minimum transit option is necessary if we want to be competitive and not lose jobs at the expense of other regions," he said.

DeSousa denied the claim that an extension to the Orange line would be at the expense of the long-awaited extension to the Metro's Blue line.

The Saint-Laurent borough mayor did not indicate how much the extension would cost but pointed out that the STM already plans to extend a portion of tunnel near the Côte-Vertu station as part of a $400 million underground garage for metro cars.

With files from Benoît Chapdelaine/Radio-Canada