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Originally Posted by Phalanx
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Thanks for that. It's good to have that kind of perspective.
I agree that if it's ever going to work, there needs to be a major investment in passenger-only rail infrastructure. As you mentioned in your previous post, as long as passenger rail takes second-fiddle to freight, there isn't really hope that passenger rail will be considered to be a viable alternative to just hopping in your car and going wherever.
I also agree with the guy in the first video that they need to 'overbuild' the new HFR to be expandable in the future, even if it means building it to HSR standards (if that's an option). Regardless, even if they don't build it to be able to actually have 'real' HSR in the future, it's still a step in the right direction.
From a Nova Scotia perspective, if we were to build a dedicated passenger rail line, where would we do it? Run a separate line beside the freight rails, or something completely different, like using some of the ROW taken up by twinned 100-series highways (perhaps run it in the center of the dividing boulevard?)?
I like the idea of bringing back rail to run through the province, like a loop from Halifax through the valley, to Yarmouth and back to Halifax via the south shore, and an eastern loop that does the same to Sydney. However, wrestling back the rails-to-trails ROWs would probably be politically very unpopular in the rural areas... though the idea of sacrificing trails that are basically used by ATVs for bringing back rural train service might tip the scales a little (?). I think that cost would be the real determining factor, though, in that the Feds and the Province would have to get together and kick in some big money to make it happen. On a private level it would probably be (rightfully) considered too risky to take on - even in the heyday of rail in the early 20th century, there was a lot of money lost by rail companies trying to make a run at it.