mdrejhon
Senior Member
On the theoretical concept of REM construction intentionally creating more future tunnel work (ALTO) under Mont Royal.
(SNC Lavalin being both REM and ALTO makes a lot more sense, egged on by CDPQ)
It means they were smart, and it means they're smart enough to make ALTO happen. It's a calculated engineered Montreal buy-in.
It also, for the sake of on-topicness (via long winded chaos theory path), ALTO could potentially eventually force GO Electrification happen due to catenary commonalty agreements in a couple decades, if the big M hasn't paved electrification ahead of them.
With all the supertankers worth of plausible deniability, it's long non-scandal water under the bridge - REM's (practically) done, most of Montreal loves REM, ALTO needs tunnels, VIA needs solution. Buy in! It'd be a non-scandal that ends well instead of badly: Canada could be finally getting a high speed train, and Toronto might end up getting a catenary domino for GO Electrification as a backup plan to the big M dragging feet beforehand.
Through my lifetime to my fifties today, I have participated in election campaigns of household member, and my dad diplomat working in Canada Embassy¹ has taught me a lot too. (We Ontarians are breathing clean air, swimming in Blue Flag status Erie waters, and fishing in Lake Erie, because of my dad's involvement in the Acid Rain Accord). Fun thing, as a paperboy, I personally delivered the Ottawa Citizen Newspaper announcing the subsequent domino falls (Clean Air Act). Overalls, all this adjacent exposure, I've witnessed in my lifetime, enough to see these things happen in backrooms. There's smart ones and the dumb ones.
This notion is plausibly a 50-50 wash, one would hope in this specific case it is the smart upside, not dumb downside. What if there were information one or two of the stakeholders (<wit>see dee you qoo ... yoo hoo</wit>) already knew. Given they pulled off a REM, I'm praying.
I sense "pretend projects" (SmartTrack yoo hoo) and I know "stack the card deck" projects when I see them.
ALTO is a "stack the card deck" project, favouring the House. Yes, I rah-rah'd the big M a decade ago. M's "armlengthing" did the job of cancel-proofing a lot of projects and getting the **** out of the Transit Dark Ages (1995-2015, book ended by Eglinton Subway cancellation and the opening of UP Pearson). But, yes, I'm ultimately disappionted at the big M nowadays, despite winning the Commuter Train Champion Trophy of North America. But with the M inefficiencies, ALTO is the trojan horse.
These kinds of masterplanning chess moves are how politicians win: Something gets done with buy-in.
¹Citation: My dad George Rejhon (alive, 92 today) as diplomat, Canada Embassy

I've watched the game of chess long enough. Watching the game of good politics masterplanning requires learning grandmaster chess (like learning American Football rules or the nuances of hockey).
Magnus Carlsen (the chess champ, y'know) sometimes plays dumb or bored teenager, then suddenly does a masterclass of a chess move.
Never, never, never underestimate those politicians/stakeholders who play dumb. Likewise, never underestimate the smartest Internet commentators. Some are genuinely dumb but not all of them, they think several chess moves ahead.
(sigh)
I wish politics wasn't a game, but your opponent forces it to be a game (mishmash of poker and chess and more).
Masterplanning Chess Olympics
I pay my Gen-X (voting) ticket to become a spectator, and often pay attention metaphorically near front row seats in a grand politics arena. Totally preferring to be on the sidelines as a spectator who pay the (voting) admission ticket, I still root for the winning chess moves that gives the population the "good stuff" like ALTO, it will be addicting by 2040-2050s.
The jaded spectator seated next to me, symbolically attending the Politics Masterplanning Olympics, is just merely looking down to their smartphone's Almighty Algorithm echo chambers.
Me, I'm watching the field and know the masterplanning chess rules. We need more masterplanning chess grandmasters like R.C. Harris. His winning chess moves were our vaunted 1918 Prince Edward Viaduct that Bloor-Danforth Subway runs over -- and also of our beautiful Waterworks Mahal. We have North America's finest tap water a century later.
I prefer ALTO addition than Almighty Algorithm addiction. Railroad induced demand. I know enough that the stacked ALTO deck has now become almost polymarket bettable now. I already see what's happening a few chess moves ahead. But don't yet bet 2029 shovels yet in the metaphorical ALTO betting category.
(SNC Lavalin being both REM and ALTO makes a lot more sense, egged on by CDPQ)
Aaaaaand.... I'd actually hope the above was covertly one of the reasons.D'oh, maybe pulled a potential "masterclass in masterplanning" fast one on us, didn't they? Maybe they weren't that smart, but the smart ones think several chess moves ahead, and pretend they didn't. We're none for the wiser, but at least to a good upside -- on this one -- hopefully. So I'll give them that brownie "benefit of doubt" point.
It means they were smart, and it means they're smart enough to make ALTO happen. It's a calculated engineered Montreal buy-in.
It also, for the sake of on-topicness (via long winded chaos theory path), ALTO could potentially eventually force GO Electrification happen due to catenary commonalty agreements in a couple decades, if the big M hasn't paved electrification ahead of them.
With all the supertankers worth of plausible deniability, it's long non-scandal water under the bridge - REM's (practically) done, most of Montreal loves REM, ALTO needs tunnels, VIA needs solution. Buy in! It'd be a non-scandal that ends well instead of badly: Canada could be finally getting a high speed train, and Toronto might end up getting a catenary domino for GO Electrification as a backup plan to the big M dragging feet beforehand.
Through my lifetime to my fifties today, I have participated in election campaigns of household member, and my dad diplomat working in Canada Embassy¹ has taught me a lot too. (We Ontarians are breathing clean air, swimming in Blue Flag status Erie waters, and fishing in Lake Erie, because of my dad's involvement in the Acid Rain Accord). Fun thing, as a paperboy, I personally delivered the Ottawa Citizen Newspaper announcing the subsequent domino falls (Clean Air Act). Overalls, all this adjacent exposure, I've witnessed in my lifetime, enough to see these things happen in backrooms. There's smart ones and the dumb ones.
This notion is plausibly a 50-50 wash, one would hope in this specific case it is the smart upside, not dumb downside. What if there were information one or two of the stakeholders (<wit>see dee you qoo ... yoo hoo</wit>) already knew. Given they pulled off a REM, I'm praying.
I sense "pretend projects" (SmartTrack yoo hoo) and I know "stack the card deck" projects when I see them.
ALTO is a "stack the card deck" project, favouring the House. Yes, I rah-rah'd the big M a decade ago. M's "armlengthing" did the job of cancel-proofing a lot of projects and getting the **** out of the Transit Dark Ages (1995-2015, book ended by Eglinton Subway cancellation and the opening of UP Pearson). But, yes, I'm ultimately disappionted at the big M nowadays, despite winning the Commuter Train Champion Trophy of North America. But with the M inefficiencies, ALTO is the trojan horse.
These kinds of masterplanning chess moves are how politicians win: Something gets done with buy-in.
¹Citation: My dad George Rejhon (alive, 92 today) as diplomat, Canada Embassy
I've watched the game of chess long enough. Watching the game of good politics masterplanning requires learning grandmaster chess (like learning American Football rules or the nuances of hockey).
Magnus Carlsen (the chess champ, y'know) sometimes plays dumb or bored teenager, then suddenly does a masterclass of a chess move.
Never, never, never underestimate those politicians/stakeholders who play dumb. Likewise, never underestimate the smartest Internet commentators. Some are genuinely dumb but not all of them, they think several chess moves ahead.
(sigh)
I wish politics wasn't a game, but your opponent forces it to be a game (mishmash of poker and chess and more).
Masterplanning Chess Olympics
I pay my Gen-X (voting) ticket to become a spectator, and often pay attention metaphorically near front row seats in a grand politics arena. Totally preferring to be on the sidelines as a spectator who pay the (voting) admission ticket, I still root for the winning chess moves that gives the population the "good stuff" like ALTO, it will be addicting by 2040-2050s.
The jaded spectator seated next to me, symbolically attending the Politics Masterplanning Olympics, is just merely looking down to their smartphone's Almighty Algorithm echo chambers.
Me, I'm watching the field and know the masterplanning chess rules. We need more masterplanning chess grandmasters like R.C. Harris. His winning chess moves were our vaunted 1918 Prince Edward Viaduct that Bloor-Danforth Subway runs over -- and also of our beautiful Waterworks Mahal. We have North America's finest tap water a century later.
I prefer ALTO addition than Almighty Algorithm addiction. Railroad induced demand. I know enough that the stacked ALTO deck has now become almost polymarket bettable now. I already see what's happening a few chess moves ahead. But don't yet bet 2029 shovels yet in the metaphorical ALTO betting category.
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