Senneterre and Saguenay are both connected to the continental road network, lol... so that rationale is still irrelevant.
And the question remains, why has there been no study in the 40 years since service was cancelled as to whether or not it should be restarted... since the region has tripled in population since then. The only people doing the studies are the Alberta government and private companies. I never thought about it this way, but it seems to be another eastern-imposed aspect of Western Alienation. Rinkydink nearly useless routes being given tens of millions in subsidies in Ontario and Quebec, but no service for a region of 3.5 million people in a reasonably sized and densely populated region (by Canadian standards), which also includes one of the nation's top tourist destinations (Banff National Park) and 5 UNESCO world heritage sites within a 2.5 hour drive of the southern terminus (Calgary), the largest cluster of UNESCO sites in the country.
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Originally Posted by Djeffery
It does seem strange to me that Calgary, Red Deer and Edmonton couldn't support rail though. How long did it take to go between Cal and Edm by train? How about time comparisons downtown to downtown rail and flying?
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Part of your question is answered above (no study by Via in 40 years), so of course we could support rail by now. The downtown to downtown driving time is just under 3 hours when driving the speed limit, so about 2.5 hours when driving 125. I'd guess the train was about 2.5 to 3 hours as well, based on conventional rail speeds? Flying takes much longer. Of course the flight is less than an hour, but driving to and from the airports (20 min from downtown Calgary, 30 min from downtown Edmonton), security, baggage, potential delays, and all the extra hassle... rail just makes way more sense.