The last truck rolled out of Oshawa, Ontario’s 66-year-old GM plant today

This 2009 file photo shows a Chevrolet Camaro on General Motors flex line at its Oshawa, Ontario plant.Chevrolet GMs long-running Oshawa, Ontario assembly plant officially ceased vehicle production today, December 18.General Motors of Canada has been building cars in Oshawa since the company’s inception in 1918, though the car assembly plant closed this month was opened in late 1953, when demand for Canadian-built Chevrolets was strong enough to warrant building a second facility.The plants closure was announced November 2018 and was due to the recent restructuring of the company, which will halt vehicle production there.Two of the final products that rolled off its line the Cadillac XTS and Chevrolet Impala were discontinued this year, and GM announced the plant would not be updated for the next generation of vehicles.The closing of the plant leaves 2,300 workers unemployed. Just because the plant is finished making cars, however, doesnt mean its going to be completely abandoned by the automaker.Around 300 workers will remain employed at the plant, as parts-stampers for GM and other suppliers. GM made a commitment to produce quarter panels, trunks, doors and hoods at the plant for the next 10 years. GM has also injected $170 million into the plant to convert it into a test site for autonomous- and connected-vehicle technology. Ground has already been broken on the 55-acre site for a paved testing circuit.Some Oshawa workers are eligible for retirement incentives of up to $150,000 if theyve been working there for more than 30 years, or are of retirement age. They will also receive a $10,000 vehicle voucher. Workers who are less than 50 years old but have 10 years or more experience and will turn 50 within three years will be offered an up-to-$150,000 buyout package, or can opt to be placed on a layoff
Origin: The last truck rolled out of Oshawa, Ontario’s 66-year-old GM plant today

Despite federal rebate, Ontario’s electric car sales still haven’t recovered

Alexis Georgeson demonstrates how to charge a Tesla model S electric car during a ribbon-cutting for Teslas first Ontario supercharger stations in Toronto , Ontario, Thursday,September 4, 2014.Postmedia Sales of electric vehicles in Ontario have plummeted since the Progressive Conservative government cancelled a rebate last year, hampering progress toward a national target.In the first six months of this year, sales in Ontario were down more than 55 per cent from the same period in 2018, according to data from Electric Mobility Canada.In the second quarter of this year 2,933 electric vehicles were sold in the province, down from 7,110 in the same period last year.Ontario is the only province not seeing increases in sales, year over year.Quebec and British Columbia, which have their own provincial rebates, have long been leading in total sales. Ontarios figures had been increasing on par with theirs until the provinces financial incentive disappeared.Under the previous Liberal government, Ontario had offered up to $14,000 back for buyers of electric vehicles, but Premier Doug Fords government cancelled it after winning the June 2018 election, saying it was going to people who could already afford expensive cars.Shortly after that, Ontarios sales sharply dropped and national sales did, too.They rebounded after the introduction this spring of a $5,000 federal rebate, but national sales of electric vehicles are still only at 3.5 per cent, which is a far cry from the federal governments target of 10 per cent in 2025. Its going to be challenging for the federal government to meet that target then even more by 2030 (when Ottawa hopes the number rises to 30 per cent), said Al Cormier of Electric Mobility Canada.If Ontario was in the game again it would make the whole thing a lot easier.B.C. is now at 10 per cent of sales, with Quebec close behind at seven per cent. In Ontario, electric vehicles made up around three per cent of total passenger vehicle sales at its highest point, then dropped to below one per cent after the cancellation of the provincial rebate, then climbed to sit under two per cent after the introduction of the federal rebate.Experts say rebates are key because the up-front cost of an electric vehicle can be anywhere from $10,000 to $30,000 more than a similar gas-powered car. Rebates take away some of that initial price shock, said Cara Clairman, the CEO of Plugn Drive, a not-for-profit devoted to electric vehicles.The total cost of ownership, when you take into account that youre not going to be paying for gas and theres less maintenance, she said. The total cost of ownership today is actually lower for an EV than for most gas cars.Transportation Minister Caroline Mulroneys office refused to make her available for an interview.A spokesman for Environment Minister Jeff Yurek later said the auto industry is giving people more options on electric vehicles than ever before.People have an individual choice and responsibility when they are purchasing their next vehicle and as charging infrastructure expands, we are confident there will be an increase in the uptake of electric vehicles, Andrew Buttigieg wrote in a statement.Clairman said a 2017 survey of about 1,200 drivers in the Greater Toronto Area found that price was a larger barrier to people purchasing electric vehicles than range anxiety peoples worry their electric vehicle will run out of power before reaching their destination.It helps that vehicle manufacturers are now coming out with models with a battery range of 400 kilometres, Clairman said, but more public charging infrastructure is still needed.In Ontario, the former government had put $20 million toward installing a network of 500 charging stations across the province. Nearly 350 of them were ultimately put into service, and the current government has not built any more. Metrolinx, the provincial transit agency, actually removed some earlier this year.Private companies such as Petro-Canada are stepping in to build charging stations and there are now roughly 1,400 public chargers in Ontario, according to federal and provincial data. Experts say more are needed.It would help, Cormier said, if the government put in place requirements for charging stations in new public buildings and garages. Earlier this year, the Ontario government removed a requirement for new homes to include the wiring for potential electric vehicle charging stations.Its not just that they havent supported building these things up, theyve actually got in the way of what we were already doing, said Dianne Saxe, Ontarios former environmental commissioner whose job was axed by the Ford government.Building denser communities that reduce the need for vehicle travel is the best bang for the buck, Saxe said, followed by public transit, followed by electric vehicles for transportation needs that cant be met the first two ways.Clairman believes the pace of electric vehicle sales will one day pick up in
Origin: Despite federal rebate, Ontario’s electric car sales still haven’t recovered

Ontario’s transportation minister wants to raise the speed limits on 400-series highways

Night traffic on a busy city highway 401 in TorontoGetty Jeff Yurek, Ontario’s Transportation minister, has signalled that it is time for this Conservative government to revisit the posted speed limits on Ontario’s provincial highways. Currently set at 100 km/h, he points to their establishment back in the 1970s as an answer to that era’s fuel crisis, and that higher limits might now be in order. For a brief period of time in the late 1960s, the speed limit on the “super highways” like the 401 was raised to 115 km/h (70 mph) from 100 km/h (60 mph). Yurek says the government will consult with police and the public before moving forward with what he calls a pilot project. Police are remaining tight lipped about the politics; they know their job is to enforce the law, not make it. British Columbia raised speed limits to 120 km/hr on 1,500 kilometres of their highway system, including the famed Coquihalla, in 2014. Fatalities more than doubled, insurance claims skyrocketed 43 per cent and there was a 30 per cent rise in claims for injuries. Late last year, a third of the roadways had their original limit
Origin: Ontario’s transportation minister wants to raise the speed limits on 400-series highways

Here’s what Ontario’s new license plates will look like

Doug Ford’s Progressive Conservative government released its designs for Ontario’s new license plates April 11, including a slogan that will replace the former “Yours to Discover” motto, which has graced plates in the province for 37 years. The new plates feature white lettering on a blue background (as opposed to the blue lettering on the white background of the outgoing plates), the tri-petal Ontario Trillium logo in the center, and of course the new slogan, “A Place to Grow.” The new plate will no longer have stamped, raised lettering, instead going for a flat sticker-type surface. Though it kind of sounds like something meant to encourage the blossoming of legal cannabis business in the province, the line “A Place to Grow” is actually borrowed from the song A Place to Stand, A Place to Grow, which was written to celebrate Ontario during the nation’s centennial festivities at Expo 67 in Montreal. Still, we won’t be surprised to see people slapping pot-leaf stickers over that trillium. This is the new Ontario license plate our question is is there still a green plate? @ONtransport pic.twitter.com/usDOqWXyXf Sudbury EV Assoc. (@GSEVAssociation) April 11, 2019 Commercial vehicles will also be getting a redesigned plate with the slogan “Open for Business,” one of the Ford government’s favourite catchphrases. The updates were officially revealed during the provincial budget announcement on Thursday, which included a broader plan to update the province’s branding to the tune of $600,000. The new plates will begin to be screwed onto cars once the current inventory has been depleted.
Origin: Here’s what Ontario’s new license plates will look like