If we believe that the 1990 cuts are the best predictor for what might be to happen, it’s worth looking at what happened to each of its five service groups:
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The striking thing is that whereas the only (almost) profitable service was sold off (to RMR), only service group was eliminated in its entirety (the “Intercity” routes, though BC managed to save Victoria-Courtenay and somehow Gaspé also survived) and the transcontinental services were cut by some two-thirds, the cuts to the Corridor services were rather minor and the remote services were completely spared.
Though we can argue whether all remote routes are actually “remote”, the Churchill service certainly qualifies to any definition and Senneterre, White River or the Skeena certainly to most (if only for parts of their routes). If the remote services are there to stay, the Canadian is profitable for most of the year and its route (and required to shuttle equipment between terminii and maintenance centers) and the Ocean is the only service to Atlantic Canada, then where could the federal government possibly cut down VIA’s existing non-Corridor routes and network? Especially since they historically have never cut below 2-3 round trips per week (the sole exception I am aware of is Lasalle-Cochrane and that stretch always bordered between “remote” and “uninhabitated”)…?
The big advantage of having undergone the 1990 cuts is that there is hardly any fat left which the federal government could chop off without upsetting some of its core constituencies…