steveintoronto
Superstar
^ @Mapleson : Excellent answers! My apologies for not realizing you're 'well up' on the issue.
I'd still like to nail TC down on whether they will offer 'accommodations' 'exceptions' or (God forbid the Americanism) 'waivers' for various pieces of equipment. What I have discovered reading those sections is that it's the *operator* and not the manufacturer that applies for and ostensibly gains 'permission' (with conditions attached) for the use of 'non-conforming' stock. This was the case for the O-Train, and I've posted the TC and City of Ottawa extensive pages on that previously in the VIA string. The TC one was taken down at some point, and re-appeared about a year or so later, edited. As to why is puzzling. The City of Ottawa's are still up as originally posted almost a decade ago. I'll find the links and post as an edit here later. TC (And even CN and CP, along with many gov't agencies, assisted in OC-Transpo being awarded that. One wonders 'where's the assistance for GO Transit?' There might be some, I can't find it on-line.
What I can add to that is that I'm more familiar with trade agreements than TC missives, and CETA won't find what's up on the TC website as acceptable. "Railway equipment" is a section heading in CETA, and virtually 100% tariff free. It seems TC haven't got the memo....from a gov't that wants us all to sing the praises of what wonderful things they've done for us. (I'm a pro free-trader, albeit the noise from the south has tested that).
All TC would have to do is put a paragraph up on their website clarifying that 'Canada is open for business as long as the product meets the chapters and verse in trade deals, and domestic regulations'. I'll detail more answers later when I have reference at hand to do them justice.
Edit: From my saved notes:
http://data.tc.gc.ca/archive/eng/programs/environment-utsp-otrainlightrailproject-973.htm
http://www.ottawa.ca/calendar/ottawa/citycouncil/ttc/2002/12-04/ACS2002-TUP-TRN-0012.htm
I see the tc one is dead again. I have pretty extensive notes from that page, here's the lost of orgs behind OC-Transpo's 'accreditation' to use the (initially) 'Talents' (German mainline running design from BBD)
Google does list one...and it's a dead-end. However, the wonder of Google cache saves the day:
http://webcache.googleusercontent.c...g.pdf+&cd=1&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=ca&client=ubuntu
Just took a brief look at the TC link, and I've quoted from that prior too, IIRC the locomotive spec also states "APTA"...but not much else. Since those pages have been 're-written' it's actually more difficult to find regs than it was before.So if the APTA adopts the FRAs alternative compliance standards, then TC will adopt and accept it by default.
I'd still like to nail TC down on whether they will offer 'accommodations' 'exceptions' or (God forbid the Americanism) 'waivers' for various pieces of equipment. What I have discovered reading those sections is that it's the *operator* and not the manufacturer that applies for and ostensibly gains 'permission' (with conditions attached) for the use of 'non-conforming' stock. This was the case for the O-Train, and I've posted the TC and City of Ottawa extensive pages on that previously in the VIA string. The TC one was taken down at some point, and re-appeared about a year or so later, edited. As to why is puzzling. The City of Ottawa's are still up as originally posted almost a decade ago. I'll find the links and post as an edit here later. TC (And even CN and CP, along with many gov't agencies, assisted in OC-Transpo being awarded that. One wonders 'where's the assistance for GO Transit?' There might be some, I can't find it on-line.
What I can add to that is that I'm more familiar with trade agreements than TC missives, and CETA won't find what's up on the TC website as acceptable. "Railway equipment" is a section heading in CETA, and virtually 100% tariff free. It seems TC haven't got the memo....from a gov't that wants us all to sing the praises of what wonderful things they've done for us. (I'm a pro free-trader, albeit the noise from the south has tested that).
All TC would have to do is put a paragraph up on their website clarifying that 'Canada is open for business as long as the product meets the chapters and verse in trade deals, and domestic regulations'. I'll detail more answers later when I have reference at hand to do them justice.
Edit: From my saved notes:
http://data.tc.gc.ca/archive/eng/programs/environment-utsp-otrainlightrailproject-973.htm
http://www.ottawa.ca/calendar/ottawa/citycouncil/ttc/2002/12-04/ACS2002-TUP-TRN-0012.htm
I see the tc one is dead again. I have pretty extensive notes from that page, here's the lost of orgs behind OC-Transpo's 'accreditation' to use the (initially) 'Talents' (German mainline running design from BBD)
I'll see if I can track the web-page to see if it's re-posted under a different url rather than quote extensively.Recognition. The O-Train has won several awards:
Canadian Urban Transit Association’s Corporate Innovation Award (June 2002)
American Public Works Association’s Project of the Year Award (January 2003)
FCM-CH2M Hill Sustainable Community Award, in the sustainable transportation category (May 2003)
Participants
City of Ottawa
Transport Canada
Human Resources Development Canada
Canadian Pacific Railway
Canadian National Railway
VIA Rail
Carleton University
Public Works and Government Services Canada
National Capital Commission
Ottawa Police Services
Women’s Initiative for a Safe Environment
Transport 2000
Canadian Transport Agency
Local citizens and advocacy groups
[...]
The O-Train was initiated to assess the technical feasibility of using an existing rail corridor for rapid transit, to validate expectations about ridership, performance and cost, and to allow proper analysis of possible larger-scale implementation.
[...]
The O-Train travels on an 8-km length of existing freight rail track, and connects to the city’s bus rapid transit system (the “Transitway”) on each end of the line. The existing corridor is owned by Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR). The line serves Carleton University, a major employment centre, and a shopping mall in a densely populated neighbourhood.
The pilot project is unique by North American standards and involves four “firsts.” It is the first time that light rail
passenger trains had been mixed with heavy rail traffic on an existing rail network, and the first time passenger rail services had been operated by a single operator. In addition, this was the first time Bombardier Talent DMU trains had been used anywhere in North America, and the first trains driven by bus operators.
Google does list one...and it's a dead-end. However, the wonder of Google cache saves the day:
http://webcache.googleusercontent.c...g.pdf+&cd=1&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=ca&client=ubuntu
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