Toronto

Co-owner of company that parked in Toronto bike lane speaks out

A company that works with delivery truck drivers is calling for improved bike lane infrastructure to help both cyclists and motorists get around the city in a safer manner.

Calls grow for city to do more to protect cyclists after several incidents of obstructed bike lanes

A woman cycles past the Royal Ontario Museum in a protected bike lane on Bloor Street West.
The owner of a GTA flooring company was subject to a slew of angry calls and emails after one of his company's drivers recently parked on the Bloor Street bike lane last week, blocking it off to cyclists. (John Rieti/CBC)

A company that works with delivery truck drivers is calling for improved bike lane infrastructure to help both cyclists and motorists get around the city in a safer manner.

Blaise Page, the co-owner of a family-owned GTA flooring business, was subject to a slew of angry calls and emails after one of his company's drivers recently parked on the Bloor Street bike lane, blocking it off to cyclists.

Page said the driver, who had only been on the job for a month, initially parked in a Green P parking spot designated for cars but later moved the truck to be partially on the bike lane after he did not find a loading zone for trucks on the stretch of the road.

"The driver made an honest mistake," Page said in an interview with CBC Radio's Metro Morning on Monday.

"We do most of our deliveries before and after hours, and typically we can get into the loading dock, so we're not really interrupting these lanes," he said. 

LISTEN | Page says city should incorporate more physical barriers for bike lanes:
Blaise Page is one of the owners of Page Flooring and Concrete Solutions.

Page said the truck blocking the bike lane drew attention on the road, causing the driver to panic and move the truck across the road onto another bike lane.

"We're not out here to be parking out in bike lanes … I just don't think [there] was clear marking on the road of where that parking was and he just kind of pulled right into that spot … It was right in the middle of a bike lane though," Page said.

"He got a little bit frantic when all this happened," he said. 

"There's people coming over [to take] pictures, yelling at him. Unfortunately I think it was just like a state of being frantic."

Page took issue with the city's infrastructure saying he would like to see more designated loading zones for trucks that need to make deliveries in the downtown core, adding that bike lanes across the city should have a physical barrier to separate motorists and cyclists in order to avoid similar incidents.

"Then there would have been no issues with vehicles," he said. "The delivery guys wouldn't even be able to get into those lanes."

Calls have been growing recently for the city to implement more measures to protect cyclists, after several instances of obstructed bike lanes have led to injuries and, in some cases, deaths.

City charged companies connected to fatal crash

Last week, the City of Toronto said it had laid bylaw charges against two companies that left a construction bin in the Bloor Street W. bike lane where a 24-year-old cyclist was killed.

Ontario Trucking and Disposal Ltd., a garbage disposal bin company, faces five infractions including encumbering a street, placing an object on a street, causing dangerous conditions, unauthorized occupation of a street and failure to provide proper signage to warn the public of an obstruction on a street.

Mass Contracting Ltd., a general contractor responsible for restoration work in a parking lot nearby where the cyclist was fatally struck, was charged with causing the encumbering of a street. 

CBC Toronto has previously reached out to Ontario Trucking and Disposal Ltd. and Mass Contracting Ltd. for comment but did not get a response.

WATCH | Company that left bin in bike lane where cyclist died facing 5 infractions:

City lays bylaw charges against companies that left bin in bike lane where cyclist died

4 months ago
Duration 2:46
The City of Toronto has laid bylaw charges against two companies that left a construction bin in the middle of a Yorkville bike lane near where a 24-year-old cyclist was struck and killed by a truck driver on July 25. The charges could carry a maximum fine of up to $1,000, but as CBC’s Naama Weingarten reports, an advocate says the potential penalties are too small to prevent future tragedies.

The woman's death marks the fifth cyclist fatality in Toronto this year, according to police.

Toronto Mayor Olivia Chow said last week the city is working to prevent more cyclist deaths from occurring.

"Today the City of Toronto laid all the charges we can possibly lay against the company and the contractors that left that bin irresponsibly on the road," Chow said at an unrelated news conference Wednesday.

"The charge is low but we are following the Ontario law … Do I personally wish that the fine is higher? Absolutely."

With files from CBC Radio's Metro Morning