Quote:
Originally Posted by J81
You are arguing with someone that actually runs the schedules. And you basically confirmed exactly what i have said in previous posts. So thank you for saving me from having to post my work schedule! Taking the train once a year doesnt exactly make you an expert on the service. Take it more often and you might gain a more educated view and your opinions may hold a little more weight.
2 of the 3 trains that take longer then 4.5hrs are 50 and 52 which are Jay’d with 60 and 62. Since 50/60 as well as 52/62 run as a single train to Brockville it takes a bit longer as the trains have to be separated at Brockville before the continue to Ottawa and Montreal respectively. Those trains depart at 6:40 and 8:40. The other train that takes over 4.5 hrs is 48 which is the last train of the day and stops everywhere. So in the morning trains depart every 2 hours until 42 departs at 12:20. Then trains depart hourly after that until 48 departs at 18:40. Those are only Ottawa trains. Stick 4 more Montreal trains in amongst those Ottawa trains plus the Kingston train which is the last Eastbound train of the day at 19:40 and you start to understand just how frequent Via trains depart Union. With GO trains departing the lakeshore lines every 15 minutes all day on weekdays now there isnt much room to add anything out of Union station.
Sometimes someone posts something they know nothing about and claim it as fact and others who actually do know what theyre talking about post actual facts!
|
So, you work for VIA, eh? Based on your arrogance and combativeness on this thread - not just to me, but to others - I'm getting a good glimpse into your company's culture, and it shows in your product.
It doesn't matter that you think trains depart Union station very frequently. First of all, they don't. Second of all, if you're traveling to Ottawa, you don't care how many trains leave Union Station. You care how many trains leave Union station for Ottawa. Right now, there are 2 that leave before noon. There is nothing that gets you into Ottawa in time to have a full day of productivity. I work two blocks from Union Station, and everyone I work with who travels to Montreal or Ottawa flies. If VIA can't take the hint, the last 15 years have seen the advent of Toronto City Centre Airport, the Union Pearson Express, and - for people with less money - frequent Megabus departures to Montreal. VIA is leaving all these passengers on the table.
You don't have to write a paragraph-long screed to convince me that uncoupling a train in Brockville lengthens the travel time beyond 4.5 hours. To the traveling public, all they know is they're wasting time on some siding for ten minutes.
Let me be blunt: VIA runs dated, unreliable trains in a market with a huge latent demand for better intercity rail service. VIA can blame uncooperative freight operators all they want. The truth is, where there's a will, there's a way. There are countless stories of pariah organizations that turned themselves around and got the political and financial capital to do what they wanted to do.
We live in a country where an increasing portion of the country's elite lives and works downtown, where there are huge institutional investors, and where there are short line operators and abandoned rail rights of way that are almost just lying around waiting for offers. Get someone who can put two and two together.
PS: Run something useful in Western Canada and the Maritimes. Even a bus. You're wasting a lot of political goodwill in our fractured federation by concentrating all your chips in Southern Ontario and Quebec.