I still think it's going to be higher. Because there's a lot more commuters from Cobourg, Belleville, etc But even if it was 5 departures, if timed well, they can achieve all that Kingston, Belleville, etc residents need. I'd envision 3 departures in the morning. One in the afternoon and one in the evening. With the inverse of that schedule operating from Toronto on the return leg.
More important is rationalizing stops to improve trip times from Kingston. Can't serve both Port Hope and Cobourg. Same with Trenton and Belleville. Either these stops are served on alternate runs or cuts are made. Kingston trip times to Union vary widely from 2:12hrs to 2:53hrs. They need to improve consistency.
Recognizing @UrbanSky's offer of a spreadsheet, I did a bit of noodling about timings. All of these are borne out by past timings and precedents which were used in CN days to shape the services. (@UrbanSky may know whether these are borne out by data today, but likely can't comment.)
My "bare minimum" spec, looking solely at stops in the Toronto-Kingston zone, is 7 trains:
Into Toronto - arrival times
0800ish - true commuter and/or infrequent commuters who need to be at work for the start of the business day
1000ish - Coming in for the day but didn't want/need to get up at the break of dawn for the earlier train
1200ish - midday connections to VIA westward, people coming in for the afternoon, people who don't want to wait any later in the day to travel
1530ish - intercity travellers making westward connections, people finishing business east of the city by noon
1830ish - business travellers returning after a full day out of the city, people coming into for the evening sports, theatre etc
2030ish - alternative for those who couldn't make the 1830 train but don't want to wait all evening for the next train
2245 - for those wanting as late arrival as possible in the city, connections to late trains out of Toronto (2300 was once the magic hour for last-of-day connections between trains, passenger volume used to be huge but VIA has withdrawn from this market)
out of Toronto - departure times
0630ish - travellers with early meeting commitments, departure has to be super early assuming a curfew during inbound GO peak
0900ish - first counterflow after the GO rush, people who want to arrive early but can’t or won’t get down for the 0630
1200ish - returns from early morning appointments, connections from trains west of Toronto
1545ish - business travellers finishing meetings early, alternative to the peak rush hour crowds, connections from trains west
1700 - traditional "true downtown commuter" slot
1900ish - Plan B train for commuters who worked late, casual travellers who want late day travel but arriving not in the wee hours
2315ish - return trip for evening sports and entertainment crowd, plus that 2300-hub connection
I agree that the smaller communities (Napanee, Trenton Jct, Port Hope) don’t need every train to stop. Port Hope is becoming a bedroom community, so maybe only the commuter slot to Toronto matters. At other times, people can drive or take "transit" to Cobourg. Trenton Jct seems a redundant stop considering Belleville is so close, but perhaps the data says otherwise. Napanee needs one morning and one evening train in each direction.
I see two problems with the "five is good enough" premise. One, as
@nfitz points out, is that VIA has been forced to retreat west of Toronto to a pathetic anemic under-service on all lines, and I see the same combination of CN hostility, budget-cutting Ottawa hostility, and lack of VIA bargaining leverage is likely to unfold here - no matter how sincerely VIA feels otherwise, over time they will be squeezed to cut service.
The other is, why run a service that cannot be scalable to growth? The Lakeshore communities east of Toronto are all growing and the 401 is filling up. Suppose a five- or seven-train service proves successful, and there is pressure for additional service? What if the commuter peak justifies a second train, or more? What CN says it will accept now, versus what it will oppose later, may turn out to be two different stories. Look at how badly CN opposes GO on its trackage to Niagara, where there has been absolutely no growth in freight volumes over past decades and much more frequent CN/VIA service. CN is forcing GO to add its own track just to reclaim that old benchmark.
I am confident that whatever service level VIA implements to Kingston on the day HFR goes live, is all CN will ever allow thereafter. That's why this should not be underestimated. And, if one does build in the premise of growth, one quickly gets to the same conflict between pax and freight that is the problem today. So why not build more track and keep all the service on one corridor?
- Paul