Quote:
Originally Posted by MonctonRad
There is that pesky American border to deal with as well as officious customs agents.
I had suggested in the past that VIA should use the more direct CNR mainline from Moncton to Grand Falls and Edmundston rather than the coastal route via Miramichi, Bathurst, Campbellton and the Matapedia, but, apparently, VIA is mandated to keep the existing routing through eastern Quebec.
The CNR mainline is a class one railway, better maintained and more direct and would lop at least 3-4 hours off the trip to Montreal, but, whatever.
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CNR has every opportunity to compete here. I would heartily endorse the CNR if it was the best option. The truth is that this whole opportunity wouldn't exist if the CNR was the best option. Their priority has been Halifax for at least the last 50+ years. You will have to ask the CNR why but my guess might be because CP couldn’t compete there.
Please let us know how you have determined that the CNR is "more direct and would lop at least 3-4 hours off the trip to Montreal, but, whatever." Unless you redefine "direct" I don't see it. If your ststement was true, I would endorse the CNR.
Here’s Dan Bresolin - VP Intermodal, Canadian National Railway minimizing their 200+ mile problem:
https://youtu.be/cN7gE4Uc3Qw?t=1177
A fair amount of uhhhh.... and repeating single syllable words while trying to minimize 200+ miles. If they had it, he would have been telling everybody about it right there.
The CNR mainline is 82 miles as the crow flies in the wrong direction from Saint John. So it is a few more travelled miles than that. Vanceboro, Maine is 82 miles travelled distance. Why travel around the block when you want to go next door?
The CPR is a class one railway. CSX is a class one railway. The CNR is a class one railway. One difference between the three is that the CNR has a long history in Saint John and they have contributed little to the city beyond the services paid for. If I am wrong, let me know what real difference CN makes. They have done little except provide a paid for service that has been just that. That record speaks for itself. What and where are their priorities?
Even so, I would promote the CNR if it was a better option.
The NBSR has survived running a slow regional railroad that could compete with the CNR to wherever freight needed to go. Perhaps speed hasn't been their priority because it hasn't been a deciding factor in the goods they transport or the customers they serve. At least they have kept the line open and provided an alternative for key industries in Saint John. I would bet CN never seriously considered picking up what NBSR started with.
But now the NBSR has direct connections to three class one railroads that see big opportunities. I'm not going to walk around the block when I only want to go next door.
Upgrade the west bound NBSR lines to modern standards. It is unfortunate that that goes in the opposite direction from CN but that was CN’s decision.
I don't really care if another passenger train goes from Montreal to Saint John and beyond. If the rules are that something besides passenger needs determines the service provided, it probably will be found lacking.
Finally, Canada and the US have been each other's biggest $$$ trading partners for a long long time. If that's changed, the fact that we have border control systems to streamline transportation of legal goods hasn't. Border traversal is not a concern and I'm kind of surprised you even bring that up since it has not been a serious issue lately as far as I know.