smallspy
Senior Member
It's not just for a for-profit company though, is it?Your description of "railroading standpoint" is simply a description of a for-profit company, which the Province of Ontario is not.
I know that they have no interest in the timelinesss of trains from other organizations. That's exactly what I'm saying. We, as the citizens of Ontario, should be demanding that Metrolinx act as an impartial rail infrastructure operator to benefit all passenger operations in Ontario, not just GO Transit, and as such their performance metrics should be changed to include evaluation for performance of Via Rail trains as well as GO Trains. In many states, it's actually the state-owned segments of railway where Amtrak has the most reliable service. It's absurd that in Ontario the provincially-owned railways are among the most unreliable segments for Via Rail on a per-kilometre basis.
The current situation where Metrolinx Rail Traffic Control is only evaluated on the performance of GO trains and not at all on other trains creates a horrendously suboptimal situation where dispatch regularly adds 15+ minutes of delay to Via trains just on the off chance that doing so could save 30 seconds for an on-time GO Train that already has several minutes of schedule padding. There is no possible evaluation of railroading in which that decision is in the best interest of the public.
For better or for worse, Metrolinx tracks it's delay/on-time figures. And it attributes any delays to the appropriate division that it feel should. And remember that 15 minute service guarantee? Those delays get attributed in part to figure out whether Metrolinx is at fault, and thus has to pay out for the delays. https://www.gotransit.com/en/service-guarantee
And it's more than just that - in quite a few cases people's jobs are on the line. Morale is not terrific in many parts of the organization, and anything that anyone can do to keep out of the proverbial firing line they will. And if that means that the dispatchers following the grid to a "T", to the detriment of VIA, that's exactly what they will do.
Don't get me wrong, I am not in any way excusing or condoning the practice. As you stated in your earlier post it's pretty abhorrent to be on a VIA train that has sailed past a GO train, only to have to wait for it to service a stop or two and then come past. I've experienced it several times. But unfortunately it's not likely to change in the near term, not without a hell of a lot more noise than is happening now.
Dan




