Well, I think you would indeed find those here who feel subsidy is a bad word.
Sure, but we don't give those people the time-of-day.
What you will get more arguments about is the level of subsidy. Some posters here have no concept about the value of money, and would like untold billions on brand new corridors to every corner of the country.
There is a sweet spot to be reached.
Aside from that, yes, they should be getting more subsidy. Our current government seems to believe austerity is the better path with a 15% cut mandate.
Again, no arguments here.
Every corridor trip late by over an hour gets a 50% compensation. For the record, I racked up three of these last year alone. Between myself and a handful of other family members, we're up in the double digits.
So, in order to fund these compensations and lacking additional subsidy (and now, a 15% cut), there's incentive to raise prices.
I'm well aware of the math. I too have travelled on late trains, some measured in multiple hours.
By the way, pro-tip - collect the late credit compensation as points.
But that goes back to the whole crux of the argument of ALTO versus VIA. Most of those delays are caused by corridor traffic, or accumulated delays over the course of the day. Putting the trains into their own corridor gets them out of that problem, or at least limits it.
The federal government both owns VIA and regulates rail. It's been more than happy to sit back and let CN/CPKC continue to control what VIA Rail can do in this country.
They also have to regulate rail in some sort of parallel with how the US operates, considering that a fairly major fraction of freight traffic originates from or is destined to the US.
Plus, you realize that a government is not a monolith, right? Those doing the regulatory oversight aren't necessarily the ones doling out the monies that VIA needs.
So how would you do it, in that case?
But only for HSR. We'll ultimately have two "classes" of rail; one subject to freight companies, one not. So those heading to Port Hope, Cornwall, etc. will continue to suffer delays. Somehow, Ontario was able to legislate priority for GO, but…
As pointed out above, Ontario did no such thing.
They spent far too much money on buying corridors. And even then, they don't have perfect priority, as most of those lines still have to interface with the freight railways. Delays still happen.
Again, who dictates those regulations and who owns VIA?
I'm still waiting on you to suggest a better option.
Please, show me variable pricing (not discount code) fare that goes any lower than $55 from Toronto-Montreal.
You want me to do your homework? Shall I suggest instead that you tell everyone that your dog ate it?
See above as to who's allowing the hamstringing to continue.
Continuing to score own goals for decades is ridiculous, don't you think?
And see my points above about the railways.
Oddly enough, managing to increase ridership while having their funding cut time-and-time again and operating in a regulatory environment that is set up to cause you to fail is not what I'd describe as an "own goal".
Because this isn't an airline thread?
It's not even a VIA thread, and yet here we are. Why limit yourself?
Dan