It's meant to be a fantasy map. I should have specified that. However, rail service in this country is s***y. I would love to see actual service on all of the major corridors.
There are two types of fantasy maps: one which extrapolates from the current network to add new corridors and lines first between the main nodes and then branching out, whereas others just draw lines for aesthetic reasons. The ideas presented by
@micheal_can here fall under this category (even without posting any maps) because even though he might be overly optimistic, he’s not ignoring the fact that trains can only run where there are still any tracks left, that new dedicated passenger tracks will not be built anywhere outside the Quebec-Windsor or Edmonton-Calgary corridors within our lifetimes, and that the services offered must somehow follow the existing travel flows and that means that most lines will.
Conversely, your map falls into the second category, as it completely ignores the lack of any remaining tracks to cities like Fredericton or along the Ottawa Valley and by having more nodes connected to Rivières-de-Loup (6) than Montreal (5) or more to Fredericton (4) than Halifax (3). I can’t comment on the map in terms of its visual design, but I don’t think that anything else than a dedicated “Fantasy Maps” thread would be the right place to discuss such a map...
These projects have been proposed for 50 years.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High-speed_rail_in_Canada#Early_high-speed_rail_in_Canada
I doubt this project will get built. *I hope it does, I just think the non-committedness of Ottawa makes it impossible. *
HSR (like “these projects” you are referring to) have indeed be studied for almost half a century, but HFR is a much more sober look at what can be done within the next 5-10 years with $4-6 billion to be funded mostly by private investors rather than within the next 15-25 years with $20+ billion to be funded almost exclusively by the taxpayer...
I can certainly see the political risks....they would have to defend spending money in Quebec, they would have to manage the optics of having perceived “welfare corporations” such as Bombardier and SNC Lavalin within the competing vendors, plus fend off opposition from air and highway interests, plus perhaps fuel public mistrust of federal procurement processes generally.
Fair points. But I have my doubts. Take a similarly important project. Say the Confederation Bridge? It happened with the public and local politicians pushing it. Not with some government agency lobbying for it.
[...]
Trudeau seems to have stepped up a bit since the election. And they do seem to be progressing. But I absolutely question their sincerity when they did almost nothing for 4 years with a majority. What happens when the deficit gets too high and they need to cut something? What happens when they realize that $4 billion in transit promises across the country might buy more votes than HFR?
The Montreal-Quebec City section is not very defensible on traffic. I believe that VIA or the CIB's own maths showed that. Yet, they are pushing this, with all the complications of not having access to the Mount Royal Tunnel on top of everything. All while not connecting to Pearson Airport and KWC, places which would have high demand for ridership. So yes, they sort of deserve the flack they are getting for this. Would it really have been hard to at least run through service at Union and reach Pearson at least?
All that said, I think a lot of the public is actually at a point where they'd understand spending a few billion on a train between Toronto, Ottawa and Montreal. But the process has to be squeaky clean. Can't at all be seen as another back door to pay a big Quebec megacorp.
It really surprises me how much even you two struggle to get your head around this project being targeted predominantly at funding from private investors and that the taxpayers’ role would be primarily to get the planning to a stage and to reduce risks to a level where investors have enough confidence to buy into the project. The only reason why the Montreal-Quebec was included into the planning scope was that the (back then: liberal) provincial government insisted on having it included, whereas their (just as liberal) peers in Toronto insisted on putting all of their eggs (for SWO) into the HSR basket instead. However, it will be the private investors who decide into which segments they are willing to invest themselves and into which they don’t and from all we’ve read so far in the newspapers, the Quebec taxpayers will have to pay a non-trivial share of the capital costs of Montreal-Quebec to make that project as profitable (from an investor’s perspective) as Montreal-Ottawa-Toronto...
As for the suggestion that VIA should have expanded the scope of HFR beyond Union Station, how would that have been politically feasible before the Wynne-Colonette HSR zombie finally got buried (just recall how much VIA got scolded in the London Free Press* for continuing to promote their HFR project after Wynne pulled HSR out of her hat and then imagine what would have happened if VIA had dared the same on a Corridor which actually interfered with Wynne’s pet project)? And how would you have achieved a stop at Pearson Airport and frequent frequencies towards KWC-London without auxiliary projects like the Pearson Transit Hub and The Missing Link, which entail much higher capital costs and a much longer time frame than keeping HFR to East of Toronto? Or achieved a mutual agreement with Metrolinx about the extent to which the services and fares offered by HFR and GO would integrate, complement or compete with each other?
* For instance:
https://lfpress.com/2016/04/15/via-...peed/wcm/1c01a33c-4249-0675-9561-67bc148ad458