What's the reasoning there? For CN, what would happen to MacMillan? That would be an odd move as it sits right off the York, no?
The reasoning is that the land in the GTA is just too bloody valuable to have it tied up by tracks with cars sitting on them. The yards and facilities can be located just about anywhere, but preferably somewhere with cheap(-ish) land.
One of the ideas I've heard about for CN is the Belleville area.
Hunter Harrison wanted to get rid of hump yards at the time to lower operating costs.
A little bit of context here is necessary, I think.
Hunter Harrison wanted to get rid of hump yards for two main reasons:
- The primary one is that the railways are in the business of moving goods - and hump yards are (largely) an anathema to that. Every day that a car spends in a hump yard is hundreds of miles that it could have traveled to get it closer to its destination. And he had gone on record as saying precisely this.
- The secondary one is that carload and less-than-carload traffic - think of things like boxcars and tank cars - are much harder to make a big profit on, as they require much more handling by the railways. While yes, the amount of that traffic on the railways of North America has dropped precipitously in the past 50 years (and there are a LOT of reasons for that, not just the railways turning away that business), taking away the hump yards - which are specifically designed to handle exactly that kind of traffic - was seen as another way of focusing more on the high-profitability traffic like bulk goods and containers. And in this case, this was more of a stick than a carrot - being detrimental to the carload/less-than-carload business and making it harder to deal with.
Where would trains from SWO and from the rest of Canada go to switch out crews?
Anywhere they want. It frequently doesn't happen at yards today.
I never understood this one. Too far east to be useful. I would have predicted Spence-Alliston, as a place to extract non-eastern traffic freom transcon trains, and bring it down to the GTA to connect with Chicago, Buffalo, and beyond. Add this to Kinnear and Wolverton.
CP’s proven inability to cope without Lambton is a sign of that need.
Moving the diesel shop that far east made no sense either.
Trenton might be a good place to seap blocks for traffic to/from Montreal and beyond, but that is only one segment of the traffic. Agincourt has other roles that Trenton won’t help much.
- Paul
I can't say that I understand it either, but......
If the land at Agincourt is worth too much when compared to land elsewhere - and while it may not be yet, it is certainly trending that way - they'll make it work.
I only found this out recently, but there was apparently quite the uproar when Vaughan was disclosed as their location for a container facility, as it was seen as "the middle of nowhere" and "miles away from anything". Now, though.....
My understanding is he was at the forefront of PSR which, while good for corporations, has been an absolute disaster for those working on the railroads and has led to a far more dangerous and less enjoyable workplace. You can't use the 'f word' here, but emphatically: eff that guy.
I think a lot of people place a lot of the industry's current ills on PSR, which is a bit unfair. PSR has its own problems vis-a-vis the industry as a whole and the way it deals with its customers, but staffing requirements aren't really integral to it's being.
And honestly, he was cutting crews - and their associated costs - long before he ever announced the idea of PSR.
Dan