allabootmatt
Senior Member
So...does this mean that Blue 22 (as in the SNC Lavalin scheme) will be the "Union-Pearson rail link"?
So...does this mean that Blue 22 (as in the SNC Lavalin scheme) will be the "Union-Pearson rail link"?
At the risk of focusing on specific words at an early stage, I'm a bit concerned about the description of the cars as "modernized", as distinct from "modern". This may imply that they still will not be of a new design.I seriously hope that the community doesn't pounce on the DMU issue, and I seriously hope that these new DMUs will be a new design. It's an opportunity to have a Canadian company design build and market a new product which has no other competition in North America.
At the risk of focusing on specific words at an early stage, I'm a bit concerned about the description of the cars as "modernized", as distinct from "modern". This may imply that they still will not be of a new design.
It's an opportunity to have a Canadian company design build and market a new product which has no other competition in North America.
The Talents in Ottawa are DMUs, not electrified, but they'd be okay as well, except they're technically light rail and wouldn't work on the Weston Sub.
From the Star:
McGuinty moving ahead with transit link to Pearson
Jan 21, 2009 01:25 PM
THE CANADIAN PRESS
Premier Dalton McGuinty says the province is moving ahead with a revised plan to build a transit link from downtown Toronto to Pearson International Airport.
He says the new plan includes a stop in the city's west end and a tunnel to prevent traffic snarls.
Metrolinx, the Ontario Crown agency that's in charge of the project, says the new plan will first have to go through public consultations and an environmental assessment.
McGuinty says the project is expected to break ground by the end of the year.
The project is part of a $1-billion transit expansion plan funded by the federal, provincial and municipal governments.
However, Metrolinx says the link between Toronto's Union Station and Pearson airport will be financed and operated privately.
http://www.thestar.com/news/ontario/article/574857
AoD
Simply, the EA process that had been stalled for several years is being restarted with some modifications to the plan.The actual service is to be paid for by the private sector operator......so what, exactly, is it that McGuinty is going ahead with?
Simply, the EA process that had been stalled for several years is being restarted with some modifications to the plan.
No, the previous announcement was simply that Metrolinx would take over responsibility for the EA process, and that the EA would be restarted from scratch under the new rules that have been developed since the second EA attempt went dormant in 2006.So it is just a reannouncement of what Metrolinx had already announced?