kingkam
New Member
I suppose venting could be a way to release your frustrations, but a better way would be to research the thing you're frustrated about and identify ways you can contribute to the outcome you envision.
Passenger Rail service is not uniformly dying in Canada. Yes, long-distance VIA services have been on life-support since the late 70's, and many intercity routes are tenuous due to the awkward financial/commercial relationship between CN and VIA, but passenger rail has been experiencing incredible growth in Southern Ontario, primarily in the form of commuter rail, but also to a lesser extent in the Toronto-Ottawa VIA service.
The GO Expansion program is an absolutely enormous project that will bring frequent electrified service to the central portions of the GO network, and all-day express service to more distant destinations such as Kitchener, Niagara Falls and Barrie. This is not just talk, this has already been underway for a decade and the results are starting to show. I have been summarizing commuter rail schedules for the past 5 years, and between January 2015 and January 2020 the number of weekly GO train trips more than doubled from 1486 to 3472. In January 2015, only the Lakeshore lines had all-day service, with service every 30 minutes. By January 2020 there was all-day service on the Lakeshore Lines (every 15 minutes midday and every 30 minutes other times), UP Express (every 15 minutes), Kitchener line (every 60 minutes), Barrie Line (every 60 minutes) and Stouffville line (every 60 minutes). Every one of these service expansions was made possible thanks to railway expansions. Some have been huge projects, such as the Georgetown South project which completely grade-separated the Kitchener corridor east of Pearson airport and doubled the width of the infrastructure to support 4 tracks (widening to 8 tracks as the Milton and Barrie lines join in). While others have been comparatively modest, such as the projects to add double-track segments on the Barrie and Stouffville lines.
At the moment, the focus has been on introducing a base layer of local train service, so off-peak travel times have not really improved. But the next step will be to introduce some all-day regional train services, which will stop at fewer stations and achieve much higher average speeds than their corresponding local services. These services can cruise at 150 km/h, which is easily fast enough to provide very competitive travel times to destinations such as Niagara Falls and Kitchener. The only regional service which currently exists is the weekend Niagara train, though it only has 4 round trips per day and its travel times are severely limited by the 50 km/h speed limit through Hamilton and 105 km/h speed limit between Hamilton and Niagara. The next service to be introduced will be an all-day service to Hamilton (probably West Harbour), thanks to a track expansion project that Metrolinx and CN are undertaking in Hamilton. Next will be all-day hourly service to Kitchener, thanks to a Metrolinx track expansion project underway between Kitchener and Georgetown which will finally introduce passing sidings to allow bidirectional service.
As mentioned by others, VIA is hoping to revolutionize its business process through the HFR project, which would give them much more control over their own operations, and thereby vastly improve service frequency and reliability.
Of course the coronavirus pandemic has been a major setback to rail travel, and some of the changes are likely here to stay, such as the increase in telecommuting and associated reduction in peak-period commuter demand to and from office centres. The good news though is that GO's expansion program happens to already match up with the market segments which are comparatively unaffected, namely off-peak travel and longer-distance commuting.
The bottom line is that if you as a citizen want to maximize your impact on improving passenger rail in Canada, your best bet is to actively support railway improvement projects such as VIA's HFR, and Metrolinx's GO Expansion. These projects commonly face political opposition from residents near the railways, so it is important to also have political support from rail travellers and potential travellers to balance this out and reduce the chance of those projects being cancelled or watered down.
Good post. Thanks for the additional information.
The funny thing is I'm a Metrolinx employee for the past 10 years and it's super annoying how political transportation projects is in general, and how it just takes too long to get anywhere because of all the levels of government needed. I don't even see our service being electrified for another 10+ years. In Europe or Asia it would have been done in 1-3 years.
Something as simply as getting rid of underutilized bus routes where only 1 person a day uses can become a HUGE issue. It's annoying.