Exactly. There are all these solutions being pitched to high express trains on the Toronto-Kingston-Montreal on the CN freight corridor, and other express Ottawa by-pass trains on the main CP freight corridor, missing the point that there are can be no express on the freight corridor because it is owned by freight companies which prioritize freight. The scheduled times for VIA are set to the lame timings they are, not because the trains aren't capable of doing the trip faster, but because they will not be going full speed the whole way because they will be slowed down in between freight trains, on sidings waiting for trains to pass, slowed because the track geometry doesn't support it in that location, etc and there is nothing they can do about it because it isn't their tracks and the improvements that would be made on those tracks would be made to benefit freight.
Somehow when we point out that HfR is a good, but not optimum, solution, we are accused of totally missing the point. I think that’s an unbalanced and somewhat extreme response. I get the point, but that doesn’t mean I’m prepared to pretend there are no low points.
There is nothing good about constraining the marketability of rail service between the nation’s two largest cities. One viewpoint suggests that HFR will be “good enough” to meet this market for now, with potential to improve over time, and perhaps that will be true. But it is not “missing the point” to acknowledge that this is a retreat in expectations. Even if we have to take a few hits to win HFR funding, I fail to see any cause for celebrating that tradeoff, nor for rationalising it away.
I do get that the historical benchmarks for direct express Toronto-Montreal service are no longer achievable - and in fact the 3:59 - 4:20 timings were never really sustained reliably “back in the day”. We do need to separate the urban legend from the reality.
I continue to harp on the Lakeshore service because I do believe there is a role for second-tier passenger service in the country’s most densely populated region. Having HFR but not advancing this second tier is not a step forward, IMHO. VIA has hinted at a service model for the Lakeshore, but this plan has not been articulated in any detail, beyond some PR utterances....and Ottawa, who have the ultimate control, hasn’t made any commitment. I appreciate
@urban Sky’s efforts to give us insight into this concept, but he can’t speak for his employer nor can he reveal details that might matter. So until that plan emerges, we have to balance what we know about the cost and operational difficulty of mixing this service with CN freight against what might be intended conceptually. Again, I don’t think it’s “missing the point” to observe that this service faces obstacles. Nor is it wrong to be concerned that expectations eg trip times are being eroded - again, let’s not rationalise away the tradeoff.
As to the practicality and cost-efficiency of this second tier of rail service, consider how easily government finds the land and funding to expand 400-series highways. The second tier is an affordable and prudent use of public capital.
Lastly, we seem to all agree that HFr will improve the acceptability of paassenger rail such that a more substantial flow of investment capital will happen in the next decade. I don’t see the problem with considering how that investment might be deployed. Don’t assume that HFR will continue to soak up this money stream to the exclusion of other projects. As to the Lakeshore - investing capital in the CN line to offset CN’s freight impacts, and sustain this shared line until we can afford to build a dedicated passenger line, may be a good strategy for the next 20 years. Whatever VIA plans, we should not set this plan up to “paddle harder to stand still” as CN builds its own business. We may need to invest to sustain and improve reliability and trip timing here also.
- Paul