Northern Light
Superstar
I, for one, think the Northlander (or train service between Toronto and North Bay, at the very least) , really ought to be viable, and therefore ought not to have been cancelled in the first place.
That said, one has to acknowledge, that as operated, the Northlander was a failed service.
Poor scheduling, unacceptably long travel times, aging equipment and maintenance facility and other overhead that could have been lower had the service been delivered by a different carrier.
A conscious investment, to upgrade track and signals, close a few select crossings, add the odd passing track section etc etc., along with proper equipment choice should be able to shave more than an hour off best historical travel times (Toronto to NB). There really is no reason, with conventional rail equipment, not to be able to get travel times under 3.5 hours.
If you did that, had one extra train set and ran predictable service, twice each way, each day (allowing day trips). Had the service operated by VIA or railing that a long-distance passenger sub-unit of GO, so that equipment could be maintained, in Toronto, by VIA, and senior mgt/marketing/ticketing could largely be handled by existing staff w/negligible overhead it should prove viable, and useful with only a moderate subsidy per passenger (operating). Obviously it would also require sensible pricing as well.
I tend to think service that is Toronto-NB, Toronto-Sudbury, Sudbury-TB, NB-Cochrane and maybe NB-Ottawa could all be viable. Other services are less justifiable (far north loop, Kenora and reinstating service to the Sault).
That said the capital layout to get worthwhile service will not be cheap!
That said, one has to acknowledge, that as operated, the Northlander was a failed service.
Poor scheduling, unacceptably long travel times, aging equipment and maintenance facility and other overhead that could have been lower had the service been delivered by a different carrier.
A conscious investment, to upgrade track and signals, close a few select crossings, add the odd passing track section etc etc., along with proper equipment choice should be able to shave more than an hour off best historical travel times (Toronto to NB). There really is no reason, with conventional rail equipment, not to be able to get travel times under 3.5 hours.
If you did that, had one extra train set and ran predictable service, twice each way, each day (allowing day trips). Had the service operated by VIA or railing that a long-distance passenger sub-unit of GO, so that equipment could be maintained, in Toronto, by VIA, and senior mgt/marketing/ticketing could largely be handled by existing staff w/negligible overhead it should prove viable, and useful with only a moderate subsidy per passenger (operating). Obviously it would also require sensible pricing as well.
I tend to think service that is Toronto-NB, Toronto-Sudbury, Sudbury-TB, NB-Cochrane and maybe NB-Ottawa could all be viable. Other services are less justifiable (far north loop, Kenora and reinstating service to the Sault).
That said the capital layout to get worthwhile service will not be cheap!