I like this survey, though I wish there was some option for people to give input in terms of not being from either Toronto or the corridor to Cochrane, but what restored train travel would mean for their willingness to move there. I'm originally from near the Sudbury area and have passed through North Bay on the bus going to and from Ottawa, but (now living in Southern Ontario) the trip via Toronto can be quite an ordeal unless you're already living in the Toronto area. It's improved profoundly with better GO service, but even so, it's an all-day experience. If train service along the corridor was restored and there was a coherent effort to do things like improve the bus corridor from Sudbury to Ottawa, it would make somewhere like North Bay or Cochrane feel much more liveable, and where intercity travel patterns more complex than "hub to hub" (eg Sudbury to North Bay) or "spoke to hub" (eg New Liskeard to North Bay) would be possible. It would make the area much more attractive for people willing to relocate, which I suspect is something that's become distinctly more desirable after COVID.
I think that makes sense. One train departing Toronto and North Bay in the morning and the in the evening after 5pm. I don't think it's possible for the train to arrive in Toronto before 9am but if it could be then it would allow people to commute to Toronto from cottage country. I'm sure lots of people drive from Bracebridge and Orillia to catch the GO train from Barrie. With housing prices being so high in Toronto, I'm sure that after covid is over a lot of companies will employ a hybrid model of working from home and in the office.
It's not convenient to catch a train leaving at 4am since the only way to get to the train would be by car.Why can't it arrive before 9am?
It's not convenient to catch a train leaving at 4am since the only way to get to the train would be by car.
Previously the train would arrive in Toronto around 10am and then leave again in the evening.It used to do a round trip in a day. That means somewhere, someone is catching a train at 4am.
OPINION: Whatever happened to Northern Ontario’s passenger trains?
Rail consultant Greg Gormick weighs in lack of government action on regional railwww.northernontariobusiness.com
I didn't write this, but it is a good read.
I think that makes sense. One train departing Toronto and North Bay in the morning and the in the evening after 5pm. I don't think it's possible for the train to arrive in Toronto before 9am but if it could be then it would allow people to commute to Toronto from cottage country. I'm sure lots of people drive from Bracebridge and Orillia to catch the GO train from Barrie. With housing prices being so high in Toronto, I'm sure that after covid is over a lot of companies will employ a hybrid model of working from home and in the office.
Considering the author of that article - it's not worth the cost of the electrons used to broadcast it to my screen.
Dan
Previously the train would arrive in Toronto around 10am and then leave again in the evening.
To have the train arrive during rush hour would mean competing for platform space at Union and track space along the Richmond Hill line.
I'm not sure how keen Metronlix will be about that.
Considering the author of that article - it's not worth the cost of the electrons used to broadcast it to my screen.
Dan
He seems to have an audience although I'm not sure why. In this article he seems to conflate a return of VIA westward from Winnipeg as some kind of purposeful slight to Ontario, ignoring the fact of quarantine restrictions imposed by Manitoba.