This is a ludicrous idea.
What makes you think that anyone coming from Toronto or Montreal - in the middle of a raging snowstorm that resulted in the 401 being entirely closed, let's remember - would manage to get to the site before it was cleaned up?
Absolutely true. Nobody was going to reach that train from afar. But somebody was in charge of that train. It’s curious how little decisionmaking authority the chief-of-train position held, and how little influence they had with the headquarters….., and how little effort was made to empower them or assist them to protect the passengers. Just do what we tell you and try to sound cheerful with your passengers, but you are on your own out there, and don’t make any decisions or we will jump all over you.
I see a great similarity to airline ops, in that in theory the pilot of an aircraft is a powerful person with whom the buck stops to a huge degree. But when a plane arrives and is told to wait on the tarmac for hours before debarking, can only shrug and nestle down in their cockpit seat and pass the matter off as “airline policy”
What makes you think that they didn't?
VIA"s own operations department has an open line to the RTCs. Needless to say, the RTCs had their hands full with what was happening on the ground, and I can only suspect that they didn't have the time for additional calls from VIA.
Dan
I don’t know what VIA’s operations center looks like, but I have toured Amtrak’s. There are certainly people (assuming they hadn’t been excused for the holidays) watching over the operation.and monitoring what’s happening on board specific trains or routes. They have a chain of command and protocols that allow them to raise issues. And communications protocols that lets them pass information to trains and to passengers. (I also know that railway RTC centers may “take the phone off the hook” when they are in the midst of some other issue.…. but VIA has the home phone number of higher ups).
We don’t know whether VIA‘s people attempted to raise an alarm and weren’t responded to, or whether somebody said we are too busy to care, or whether VIA simply decided to let things sit.
Again, we have had this discussion regarding people held on GO trains during police investigations. Some delays will require passengers to just sit and suck it up, but when basic health and safety ceases to be assured the situation rises in priority - in extreme cases, overtaking the priority of other things such as police investigations or running freight trains.
The Corridor is a morning to midnight proposition. On any given day, some trains may not make it in by midnight. A late train or two that gets in at 02:00 will not trigger concern, but when it is apparent that a trainj will not arrive until the following day at best, with no clear plan to achieve that, one would expect bells to ring. And keep ringing.
If there isn’t a clear protocol that states when protection of passengers overtakes running of freight, there ought to be, as a matter of statutory mandate. (Sorry, CN, this is part of being the unwilling landlord to passenger trains). I would apply equal principles to air travel - really bothers me how airlines can hold people on board without even letting them move around. Perhaps after a defined number of hours, or based on other criteria such as status of hvac, light, toilets, food, and medical vulnerability, a ”shelter in place” scenario must become a “rescue” scenario and handed over to the local fire chief.
It’s just lucky that the tree didn’t snag a HEP cable.
- Paul
PS - The part of this episode that I can’t get past is how the whole thing unfolded about one football field away from a subdivision and only a block or two away from a fast food joint that probably would have loved to feed a couple hundred people, even in a blizzard.
An empowered train manager could have trudged the hundred yards, started knocking on doors, and offering residents VIA points (or cash) if a couple dozen people could use their washroom. Or phoned around to see if some local fast food joint could rustle up and deliver 200 quarter pounders. And again, the operations center ought to have been able to do that for them based on preplanned protocols and data about local support options..
The passenger who bailed and started walking was not an idiot or a renegade. Apparently he knew exactly where he was, and his exit was not wandering around in the wilderness. He was using his own set of problem solving skills.