ssiguy2
Senior Member
The basic issue for VIA is that CN/CP own the tracks they run on and hence are at their mercy. They have to play nice lest they upset their landlords. Ottawa continually hopes that offering carrots will get the freight companies to play nice and it hasn't worked and now Ottawa should grab a pair and start using a stick.
CN/CP own their tracks and have the right to use them as they see fit and Ottawa should not be able to just come in and expropriate them at a whim and even if they tried this method it will take decades of battles in the courts which Ottawa would probably lose anyway. Where Ottawa does have complete control is over safety issues that they could not appeal as transportation safety is 100% the domain of the Ministry of Transport.
Ottawa could simply bring in new safety standards, like they did after Lac Megantic, to make them come to the negotiating table. Ottawa could simply change the safety regulation with new regulations stating that any freight line that crosses a road with more than 1000 vehicles a day must be grade separated. This would result in hundreds of new over/underpasses having to be built nationwide and all at the expense of the freight companies. All of a sudden CN/CP who currently state that sharing with VIA is an absolute impossibility would have an epiphany so fast it would make your head spin.
Yes, CN/CP should be fairly compensated for inconvenience or loss of track but such a maneuver would force CP/CP onto the bargaining table knowing that Ottawa means business.
CN/CP own their tracks and have the right to use them as they see fit and Ottawa should not be able to just come in and expropriate them at a whim and even if they tried this method it will take decades of battles in the courts which Ottawa would probably lose anyway. Where Ottawa does have complete control is over safety issues that they could not appeal as transportation safety is 100% the domain of the Ministry of Transport.
Ottawa could simply bring in new safety standards, like they did after Lac Megantic, to make them come to the negotiating table. Ottawa could simply change the safety regulation with new regulations stating that any freight line that crosses a road with more than 1000 vehicles a day must be grade separated. This would result in hundreds of new over/underpasses having to be built nationwide and all at the expense of the freight companies. All of a sudden CN/CP who currently state that sharing with VIA is an absolute impossibility would have an epiphany so fast it would make your head spin.
Yes, CN/CP should be fairly compensated for inconvenience or loss of track but such a maneuver would force CP/CP onto the bargaining table knowing that Ottawa means business.