kEiThZ
Superstar
Unfortunately it is a very much a black box in terms of what exactly is taking place behind the scenes.
And that black box is why I refuse to let them off the hook. I care about action not talk. For me, they had 4 years. They have not put together a financing plan. Or even started an EA. Don't try and tell me that they are serious about HFR or any intercity rail for that matter. This government can find $300 million for EV subsidies and couldn't budget a fifth of that to fully complete all studies and environmental assessments during their time in office.
Yes, part of the service could launch without the tunnel. But from an optics perspective, that Montreal-Quebec section is fairly key as it will result in the biggest time savings over the current service, and potentially be the section of the line that brings the biggest increase in customers, and elevates the potential success of the project that much more.
I think you are taking a shot in the dark here. If I recall correctly, Montreal-Quebec wasn't even included in the earliest iterations. And given the traffic on Toronto-Ottawa-Montreal, Quebec-Montreal is irrelevant to viability.
VIA is not an organization on the cutting edge. That is about as polite as I can put that.
I don't blame VIA. I blame the government that refuses to properly resources a 100% publicly owned crown corporation.
Yes, it will get worse, which is why the problem can only be ignored for so long.
They can ignore it a lot longer than you think. At minimum, their cancellation of electrification is at least for this term. Best case scenario is a restart of electrification and RER planning in 2022. And given the complexity and lead times involved, best case scenario would be getting one line done by 2026. Reality may be well be closer to 2030.
If some people see electrification as being a 'grand' project, who am I to argue with that.
What I am referring to here is the more discretized nature of spending when it comes to actual electrification of lines. We go from simply spending x hundred million/yr on track, signalling and grade separation to actually needing to spend a billion or two at a time for each line. That means simply electrification of any line will be considered against other provincial priorities. This is why I say the best case scenario would be full RER by 2040.
Consider what happens if Ford gets re-elected.