Joseph Potvin
New Member
Somehow I think courts and government agencies do not give a rat's behind about guilt trips.
Fortunately, they do.
Somehow I think courts and government agencies do not give a rat's behind about guilt trips.
This is an interesting point, not so much for Moose, although of course it would affect selection of rolling stock, but from the regulators. Since the O-Train runs under special dispensation (waivers if you wish) to allow 'light' and 'heavy' rail to operate on the same track, I'm curious as to how that would affect any other train operator over that stretch? Again, this isn't only for the Moose case, but how this might unfold for other operations that Moose has blazed the trail for. The US FRA appears considerably ahead of Canada on this, and of course, the Rest of World in many cases is far ahead, it's a situation that has to be addressed.Since MOOSE has not yet selected trains, how did you conclude what we've not chosen?
'light' and 'heavy' rail to operate on the same track. ... If Moose could get equal or similar exceptions, it could vastly reduce costs.
Safety is in fact *increased* according to APTA for rail vehicles that meet their standards rather than the much older FRA (AAR) ones. I might have ventured into an area that is still nascent in awareness in Canada, so let me flip this over: 'Would O-Train's 'exceptions' still be fully valid to TC and CTA if mixed with conventional heavy rail passenger stock of another operator sharing the track? Would/could that be addressed by upgrading the signalling and control systems?'MOOSE will not sacrifice safety to reduce costs
"wondering if Moose' use of LINTs (as the O-Train now uses) would ...
As you are convinced that the Property Powered Rail Open Market Development Model (PPR) is unworkable where service would include semi-rural areas, please share your specific critique. By now I presume you'll have read the whitepaper so you will already know that the only density that matters in a PPR undertaking is within the 0.8 km of each station. Given that πr2 gives 2 square km, and in the Greater National Capital Region we're planning on about 50 stations, you already know that this is a 100 square km property value optimization project (i.e. the train is just the method). So, when you do the arithmetic on, say, a 5% average increment in property income and asset value (assuming, say, 20% of each circle is unusable for generating value-added, and assuming 30% of the usable area involves rental properties), do your aggregate numbers across the 100 square km come out to anywhere near enough to run a train and to make a profit at the same time? Since you're joining Prof. Ian Lee in drawing conclusions about the core rationale without any need to reserve judgement until the feasibility study, may we please take a look at your preliminary numbers? (This invitation is open to anyone, of course. ...well except Allandale25, unless he promises to read the whitepaper.)
Since MOOSE has not yet selected trains, how did you conclude what we've not chosen?
Our business criteria for train selection is substantially different than for municipalities that depend on taxpayers and passenger fares, and there's no reason to expect we would select the same train as Ottawa has chosen, only to achieve uniformity.
It may well make more sense to all involved, including the City of Ottawa, for MOOSE's bi-levels to haul on that main line.
In that event, those Alstom LINTS could be redeployed by the City to other tracks, to link additional areas of their taxpaying public into the rail transit network.
Geez.
... understanding that if you think real business solutions fall from trees like ripe cherries, then you're not a businessman.
Agreed. You haven't seen it.
All of them.
So then tell us
Gotta wait.
Gladly. I hope you'll publish the details of your investors due diligence in full. Will make for some interesting reading.
Keep in mind, MOOSE is a large property value optimization project. The train service is the method. Our feasibility analysis is exploring (among many other things of course) whether a café on the 2nd deck of each bi-level car, of each train, can be expected to generate a net cost or net benefit. Our initial bet is that making the 2nd deck café a normal part of the service would generate more money in terms of market demand for real property within the
Can the tunnel near Carleton fit double decker passenger coaches? What's the clearance? Could it fit GO coaches for example
and would you be interested in using the ones Bombardier produces?
What quarter of what year will you disclose what rolling stock you want to use or is everything held up until the fall of 2017 which is when you've been quoted as saying you expect the CATS ruling?
Traffic jams: Ottawa is third most congested city in Canada, says surveyand a fully functional transit system already servicing them.