reaperexpress
Senior Member
I think this is the most realistic path forward for getting electrification through Union. The biggest challenge to getting the shed removed would be public opposition (to changes to heritage designation), but if the pressure to remove the shed is coming from the public in the first place, that opposition doesn't have as much weight behind it.More realistically, anyone could just walk down to their local MP's constituency office, and ask them to tack on an amendment to the next bill to remove the train shed from the Union station heritage designation. The new environment minister, who will probably help set government policy, is a Toronto MP with a constituency office at Queen and Pape. Any MP could submit such an amendment though.
We also don't need to completely remove the designation, it may just need to be scaled back a bit to allow the shed to be relocated to somewhere it's not preventing Canada's most populous region from introducing fully-electric (not battery-electric) trains. Perhaps part of the shed can be set up in Railway park, and/or indivdual modules can be reused as gazebos in parks across the city.
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