crs1026
Superstar
They can easily bump ridership by 10% just by stopping in Hamilton. It's squarely in the middle of the route.
Toronto-Hamilton weekend 2-way train service AND Hamilton-Niagara weekend 2-way train service!
**Tapping feet - giddyup, Metrolinx - nudge, nudge**
I took this picture a couple of weeks ago - I went down to see for myself what was so damned difficult that GO/CN had never got around to tying in the east end of the station tracks at West Harbour.
A little layman's inspection told the tale. It would likely mean messing with the existing CN Hamilton interlocking, which lies immediately to the east. This junction is several decades' old and is likely due for replacement eventually - much of the old freight CTC is being upgraded to LED signals, microprocessor-based circuitry, with the capability for PTC when that is eventually rolled out in Canada. Replacing the interlocking means installing a whole new CTC "machine", which is not cheap and has to be purpose built for that track layout. The configuration and underlying circuitry of the approach signals has to be revisited if you mess with the plant, also. CN would likely use the opportunity to revisit what configuration of crossovers it wanted. GO will want higher speed crossovers, which take up more space. The fact that it hasn't been touched makes me think that CN has left it until GO has its designs for the Niagara service figured out.
One can also see that there are utilities to be relocated. The pier for that next road overpass is a constraint, too.
None of this is insurmountable, but it's an honest amount of design and field work. Doing something as a "patch" just to facilitate weekend summer Niagara service, and then redoing later, to meet the long term needs of GO and CN when the time comes, would waste a lot of money. Sadly, this one has to wait for the right priority slot in the work program.
Lastly, the train in the picture is part of the story. That roadswitcher makes pickups and deliveries to the industries in the zone from Hamilton eastwards over past Stoney Creek. It spends a couple of hours or more on the main line in that zone, mid-day, every day, to do its work. During that time, one main line is blocked. CN may not find it practical to shift that train to midnights, when the industries it serves may be closed. So, the mainline capacity is indeed limited during the time that GO and VIA needs it.
I wish it were otherwise, but the additional connection is not a trivial task. It's more than just not "getting to it".
- Paul
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