Dan416
Senior Member
I love the pitiful dollar figure for Milton versus virtually every other line.
I love the pitiful dollar figure for Milton versus virtually every other line.
Stupid. If I was the conservatives I would promise all day trains on the Milton Line and to Cambridge.
I dont understand why Metrolinx wont fork up the money to add another track to Milton line. I believe the EA was done, it was planned to happen.
AFP may certainly result in a longer timeline, but chances are once a bidder commits to that date, they will stick to it. AFP is designed to elicit reasonable bids with realistic timelines and costing; if a bidder submits something too low/short, they pay for the overruns.
So that will be the good news. 2025 is an estimate. Once we have bids, those timelines should be pretty solid.
Need to ask Wynne why her 2014 election platform plan for 4 tracking the Milton corridor by 2021/22 die after the election.
The government recognizes continued expansion towards two‐way, all‐day GO Transit rail service as a priority. GO Transit improvements on all corridors would include additional track, grade separations, improved signalling, station improvements and additional fleet, which are all building blocks towards two‐way, all‐day service. In addition, analysis is underway on a proposal to electrify the GO rail system to deliver service at intervals as frequent as 15 minutes.
The Big Move identifies additional GO service as critical to developing the regional rapid transit network, and all-day, two-way express rail service as part of the solution. The Province has asked Metrolinx to begin work immediately to examine opportunities to move GO service towards a regional express rail, providing fast and frequent electrified service on all corridors at intervals as frequent as 15 minutes. This would represent a game-changer in how people move about the region, and enhance ridership and efficiency on GO Transit and other projects that connect to the network as well.
The Province will work with Metrolinx and municipalities on how best to prioritize transit investments through the use of rigorous business‐case analyses. These analyses will help prioritize Next Wave projects that could be accommodated within the Province’s dedicated fund for the GTHA and provide the best value for Ontarians.
Interesting set of articles.
I get your focus on what Wynne's formal election promises ...... still, one has to keep in mind that the concept of Regional Rail was articulated in The Big Move strategy and were talked about so repeatedly by ML that the commitment was already implied.
I'm technology constrained this week so can't do a proper search of stuff I collected - but certainly by 2014 GO was talking up the idea, as this Board report shows. I would bet that various Ministers or MPP's talked this up well before the election.
- Paul
It was only later in 2014, and after the election campaign, that the re-elected government, as best I can tell, added the qualifier "on lines we own" to the all-day, two-way, 15-min peak service level promise.
The sensible (and therefore quickly buried) Golden Report which was issued in December 2013 makes mentions of half hourly service, but in a way that infers to me that they were not thinking of 15 minute service.
- Paul
There are a few more details in this recent article about the bypass:
I've updated the post to include an additional point mentioned in an article about the same meeting posted by another publication here. I assume the grade separation referenced would be here near the Bramalea GO Station.
- “The first step is a new 30-kilometre corridor (between Bramalea and Milton) to bypass CNs existing track, so that we can build capacity,” said Gord Troughton, Metrolinx director of corridor infrastructure.
- That work alone will require up to 35 new bridges for road and water crossings, including significant crossings of Highways 401 and 410, the modification and/or relocation of up to 17 hydro towers and up to 3.4 kilometres of major gas lines, as well as the construction of 60 km of new track.
- Updated: A total of 60 kilometres of new track would be laid (two tracks at 30 kilometres each), a new signal system is required and a new grade separation would be built where the new bypass meets the existing rail corridor.
- Enhanced two-way rail service will also require a second 52-km track between Kitchener and Georgetown, a fourth track between Mount Pleasant and Union Station, a new tunnel under Hwy. 401 to accommodate more track on the Kitchener line, as well as other system-wide upgrades for signalling and communications systems and renovations to existing GO stations.
- But planning is underway according to Metrolinx chief communications and public affairs officer Judy Pfeifer, who said the necessary resources are being secured with dedicated staff teams and ongoing talks with CN.
- According to a rough timeline presented by Metrolinx, securing the necessary permits and approvals, including an environmental assessment, should take approximately three years. Procurement, construction and commissioning are expected to take about four years more.
- While an environmental assessment is now underway to electrify the Kitchener line between Bramalea and Highway 427, the Kitchener line west of Bramalea can’t be electrified until the new train corridor is built. That will require an additional environmental assessment.
- “Until things are sorted out with CN, any date that we would put to you, we couldn’t guarantee that we would make it,” Burke said.