Tom Box tbox-7i5HoP2kWQc@public.gmane.org [Canadian-Passenger-Rail]
2014-10-01 03:46:28 UTC
VIA's president spoke to the Montreal Board of Trade (Chambre
de Commerce) today (Tuesday, Sept 30). I hope the text of the
speech will be posted on the VIA web site, at
<http://www.viarail.ca/en/about-via-rail/media-room/speeches>,
but I don't see it there yet.
Here are a couple of news reports about that event:
<http://www.montrealgazette.com/business/Train+renaissance+track+Rail+president+says/10249694/story.html>
<http://www.journaldemontreal.com/2014/09/30/via-rail-veut-des-trains-a-plus-grande-vitesse>
Both stories mention the "Quebec City-Montreal-Ottawa-Toronto
corridor." It used to be routine to refer to the Quebec -
Windsor corridor, but it seems that the routes west of Toronto
are being deemphasized. You'll recall that frequencies there
were reduced in 2012.
The Gazette story says, "The incremental approach of buying
more and more rail sections from CN and CP over the last five
years will continue, he said. The two rail operators sell
lengths of tracks that can vary from a few kilometres to more
than 100 kilometres in places where they have several lines
that run parallel to each other.
"From time to time, tracks become available so we'll buy them."
I wonder how much track VIA has bought any track in the last
five years. The three main segments that VIA owns are the
Alexandria Sub, the Smiths Falls Sub, and the western half
of the Chatham Sub, and I'm pretty sure they were acquired
well over five years ago. There may be little bits and pieces
that have been added on in recent years, but I don't think
they were very long.
I also wonder what other track that could be of interest to
VIA will be available in the foreseeable future. Perhaps
the Brockville Sub, the western half of the Guelph Sub
(Metrolinx recently bought the eastern half) or the eastern
half of the Chatham Sub, but I don't see other corridor
routes that CN is likely to sell. We saw with the Newcastle
Sub earlier this year that VIA is unwilling to buy non-
corridor routes, even when their abandonment would threaten
the existence of a VIA train. As mentioned above, VIA's
commitment to southwestern Ontario routes doesn't seem
very strong, either.
Tom Box
tbox at ncf dot ca
Port Hope, ON, Canada
------------------------------------
Posted by: Tom Box <tbox-***@public.gmane.org>
------------------------------------
For help, send an email to Canadian-Passenger-Rail-help-***@public.gmane.org
de Commerce) today (Tuesday, Sept 30). I hope the text of the
speech will be posted on the VIA web site, at
<http://www.viarail.ca/en/about-via-rail/media-room/speeches>,
but I don't see it there yet.
Here are a couple of news reports about that event:
<http://www.montrealgazette.com/business/Train+renaissance+track+Rail+president+says/10249694/story.html>
<http://www.journaldemontreal.com/2014/09/30/via-rail-veut-des-trains-a-plus-grande-vitesse>
Both stories mention the "Quebec City-Montreal-Ottawa-Toronto
corridor." It used to be routine to refer to the Quebec -
Windsor corridor, but it seems that the routes west of Toronto
are being deemphasized. You'll recall that frequencies there
were reduced in 2012.
The Gazette story says, "The incremental approach of buying
more and more rail sections from CN and CP over the last five
years will continue, he said. The two rail operators sell
lengths of tracks that can vary from a few kilometres to more
than 100 kilometres in places where they have several lines
that run parallel to each other.
"From time to time, tracks become available so we'll buy them."
I wonder how much track VIA has bought any track in the last
five years. The three main segments that VIA owns are the
Alexandria Sub, the Smiths Falls Sub, and the western half
of the Chatham Sub, and I'm pretty sure they were acquired
well over five years ago. There may be little bits and pieces
that have been added on in recent years, but I don't think
they were very long.
I also wonder what other track that could be of interest to
VIA will be available in the foreseeable future. Perhaps
the Brockville Sub, the western half of the Guelph Sub
(Metrolinx recently bought the eastern half) or the eastern
half of the Chatham Sub, but I don't see other corridor
routes that CN is likely to sell. We saw with the Newcastle
Sub earlier this year that VIA is unwilling to buy non-
corridor routes, even when their abandonment would threaten
the existence of a VIA train. As mentioned above, VIA's
commitment to southwestern Ontario routes doesn't seem
very strong, either.
Tom Box
tbox at ncf dot ca
Port Hope, ON, Canada
------------------------------------
Posted by: Tom Box <tbox-***@public.gmane.org>
------------------------------------
For help, send an email to Canadian-Passenger-Rail-help-***@public.gmane.org