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Ford budget halts plans for high-speed rail corridor between Toronto, Windsor

WATCH: PCs announce money for transit lines, new bridges – Apr 11, 2019

The Ford government’s first budget has put a halt on plans for high-speed rail in southwestern Ontario.

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It says the provincial government has “paused capital funding for high-speed rail in the 2019 Ontario Budget.”

It states that the government will look for ways to enhance service and speed times for existing railway corridors and also the possibility of putting more buses on the road to connect the cities.

Cities along the corridor had been clamoring for improved transit service but many rural residents had opposed the plan stating that it would impair farms.

READ MORE: Ford government may scrap high-speed rail corridor between Toronto, Windsor

In a battle of cities vs. farmers, the latter appears to have the ear of the province as the budget states:

“The agricultural community has warned that the project would create a physical barrier that would eliminate countless hectares of prime agricultural land in one of Canada’s richest farm belts, restricting access to homes, fields and markets.”

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WATCH: More from Thursday’s budget announcement

The previous Liberal government had announced plans to connect Toronto to London, Ont. by 2025 with the line extending to Windsor by 2031.

READ MORE: Kathleen Wynne touts high-speed rail, defends Hydro One sale at stop in London Doug Ford,

There was no final pricetag on the project but they had committed $11 billion towards connecting the corridor which is home to seven million people and over 60 per cent of Ontario’s economic activity.

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WATCH: PCs rebrand Ontario as ‘A Place to Grow’

The Wynne Government had said that the travel times between Kitchener and Union Station in downtown Toronto would have been reduced to 48 minutes and to Pearson Airport in 32 minutes.

Further down Highway 401, a trip from London to Union station would have been 73 minutes and Londoners would have been at Pearson in just under an hour (57 minutes).

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*With files from Canadian Press

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