Admiral Beez
Superstar
Why is GO being asked to run from Buffalo, NY? Surely this is a VIA/Amtrak route?
I think that Chatham Coach used to offer this service, I have no idea when it was cancelled, though I'm guessing it was gone by the 1990s.What is the last year a bus connection (let alone: train connection) was offered between Windsor and Sarnia (pop. 70k)? Maybe that and the absence of a direct highway (though I-94 would probably still be more direct) gives us an idea of the travel patterns...
Why is GO being asked to run from Buffalo, NY? Surely this is a VIA/Amtrak route?
And, while there are logistical/institutional barriers, it's a dirt cheap idea. The added route distance is a mere 2,300 feet, and the track is in place. They already have the customs facilities roughed into their station. Sometimes our "can't be done" attitude gets in the way.
Assuming that GO Transit is a provincially-regulated railroad, this proposal is a non-starter...Why is GO being asked to run from Buffalo, NY?
How do people traveling by train cross the border now, customs wise? Does a train stop in Buffalo before/after it crosses the border to inspect everyone’s paperwork? Wouldn’t a GoTrain be held up if someone didn’t have their docs? This seems like it would end like the Rodchester ferry again, a novel idea without doing the homework on implementation.And yeah, it's a Regional service not a commuter service, but a rose by any other name can be a GO train.
Having said all of that, I would ride to Thunder Bay just for the experience.
Indeed, a simple phone call with the desired railroad operator might have revealed such nitpicking details such as that only federally regulated railroads may operate across provincial or even international borders. As for the border inspections, I don't see how any remotely reliable cross-border commuting service could be operated across Canada's only international border. I remember that at the French-Spanish border, regional (and other national trains) terminate at the first station after the border (Cerbere and Hendaye in France, Port-Bou and Irun in Spain), which used to have the advantage (in pre-Schengen times) that passengers with travel document issues would not delay all other travellers (or the train, which would return empty across the border, while the "difficult cases" are escorted to the border office)...How do people traveling by train cross the border now, customs wise? Does a train stop in Buffalo before/after it crosses the border to inspect everyone’s paperwork? Wouldn’t a GoTrain be held up if someone didn’t have their docs? This seems like it would end like the Rodchester ferry again, a novel idea without doing the homework on implementation.
I believe it is reasonable to assume that a service would be required to operate which is comparable to what VIA operated between November 1981 and January 1990, when the Super Continental was jointly operated with the Canadian between Sudbury and Winnipeg:If the Canadian did shift to CP, they might have to replicate a version of The Superior to serve then-isolated communities on the CN, although I'm admittedly not familiar with the details of VIA's 'remote service mandate'.
How do people traveling by train cross the border now, customs wise? Does a train stop in Buffalo before/after it crosses the border to inspect everyone’s paperwork? Wouldn’t a GoTrain be held up if someone didn’t have their docs? This seems like it would end like the Rodchester ferry again, a novel idea without doing the homework on implementation.