Quote:
Originally Posted by ssiguy
Canada will NEVER have an effective rail service due to being a crown corporation and therefore at the whime of politicians.
The rail system in Canada was built for both trade and transit. Contrary to popular belief however, the vast majority of people using the service were not those going from Montreal to Vancouver but rather Chilliwack to Vancouver and Sorel to Montreal. There were no cars and our road system was almost non-existent and people outside the cities used the rail to get to the bigger cities for shopping, business, entertainment, and social/governmental/health/educational needs as those services were very limited {if even existent} in small towns/rural areas at the time.
Now those same people have cars {or public transit} to take them to their big regional cities much faster and more conveniently that the current rail service.................VIA is going after a passenger constituency that no longer exists. Due to small city/town and rural politicians {90% of whom have never boarded a train and never will} however, those services are forced to continue at staggering per-person loses bleeding the subsidies where the service is needed the most. In short, Ottawa has forced VIA to provide a 21st century rail service on a 19th century business model and to no one's surprise, it isn't working. This is why we have passenger rail connecting Prince George to Prince Rupert but not Edmonton to Calgary.
Canada needs a national transportation system but that does not necessarily mean a national rail one.
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I would argue that we have the perfect storm to give Via a reason to expand - Paris Accord. Rail is 4 times less emitting than flying. Those shorter trips, they should be rail. The HFR that is planned will help, however, there are places all over Canada where a daily service would be enough.
Anything that is less than a 6 hour drive, if timed right, could be enough for people to take the train. Currently,, it is about a 10 hour train ride from here to Toronto. I can drive it in 4. While that seems like a ridiculous time difference, being able to leave the car at home and not worry about the traffic, the parking, and other things, you end up able to relax. Now, if they could speed it up, it would be great, but between Netflix, a good bock and a laptop, I can keep myself busy for hours. If it left such that I get on Friday evening and get into Toronto in the morning, even better - 10 hours of sleep.
Why not look for the benefits instead of the challenges. Then you can see the good and work on the bad.