Happy new year, everyone!
I had to stop replying to the various discussions I follow on forums like this, in order to focus on my family during the most important days of the year, but here I'm back again, so here I am now writing the seventh part of
a post I started 6 weeks ago:
Part 1
Part 2
Part 3
Part 4
Part 5
Part 6
(Replies to points previously made)
#6 About VIA's mandate and
#7 About finding viable intercity corridors outside the Quebec-Windsor Corridor
I cannot remember which one it was, but it showed that the leg that goes Toronto - Ottawa had lower ridership than Toronto - Montreal. I am not digging through 400 pages if you cannot follow along.
Let me be very serious here: I am highly aware that as a VIA employee, I have privileged access to information which is commercially sensitive and therefore not available to most other members in this forum and that sharing this kind of information with you here could be detrimental to my access to such information. Therefore, I can assure you that I correctly recall that I never provided any ridership (or revenue) figures on a per-route basis to any member in this group and especially not in any of my 500+ posts in this forum without having anyone dig through the 430 pages of this discussion. So can you please confirm that we are clear here?
The italicized paragraph Is irrelevant as a daily service is not aimed at them, but those that may take a bus or plane or car.
As I had just explained to you, frequency (thus allowing: flexibility) matters for intercity travelers, which means that having a departure once a day is not sufficient, as you need to offer a departure at the
right time of the day...
First, I wish you would be more measured in your responses. I specifically said in my post that I as not arguing for any specific pair that I listed, but rather a service model under which such services would be evaluated.
I think you are a very knowledgeable poster, but you do let your passion get the better of you, you want to win arguments you aren't even having!
That said, I think you're too quick dismissive of some city pairs. Again, its not that I'm advocating for them, but rather than I think they merit careful study to consider what options may be appropriate; and that there is at least some need to be fulfilled in some manner by public transport (it may well be a bus); but its a need not being met today.
I'm discussing these routes under the light of VIA's current mandate and I believe that I've sufficiently demonstrated why unfortunately none of the beyond-the-Corridor routes seems to be justifiable from that perspective. Therefore, if you insist on discussing these routes nevertheless, I suggest that you first propose an alternative/additional mandate which would be more receptive for such routes...
#9 About expanding transcontinental VIA services
Let's say you need to get from Thunder Bay to Toronto. You can use a variety of methods If you are in a place like Oba, which, even driving would be a challenge.
Oba has a
population of 20 people and is
accessible by road via Hearst and Hornepayne, so if Oba isn't s place which is adequately served by a twice-weekly train service, then what place in this country is?
By having a reliable train, you could potentially take it, especially for shopping trips or for medical reasons. You do know that there are some medical reasons that may make flying more of a challenge, and a bus is too rough of a ride.
I don't see why traveling in a Highway bus (we are not talking about School buses) in one of the center rows (i.e. as far away from the axles as possible) would be less rough than driving in a car and travel by car would also be required to reach the rail station (if there was any rail service)...
The Bold paragraph Actually sounds like you understand that VIA could do almost anything as long as they show it protects the interest of the taxpayer. I would think serving the large cities outside of the Corridor could be argued as protecting the interest of the taxpayers.
The problem being that you are not the only taxpayer in this country and that most other taxpayers expect to see at least some level of value-for-money analysis before throwing more money at one of its crown corporations...
Let me ask a different question. Let's say you keep the Canadian as is; for tourists. Let's also say you have daily service between Vancouver and Winnipeg, severing [sic!] both the southern (CP) and northern (CN) routes, what would make sense for a daily between Winnipeg and Toronto?
VCVR-EDMO-WNPG (CN), VCVR-Calgary-WNPG (CP) and WNPG-SUDB-TRTO (CP) have a combined route length of 6,883 km (2523, 2371 and 1989 km, respectively), which would mean that you would add almost 100,000 train-km every week and just over 5 million train-km every year and result in an increase of VIA's current mileage by almost one-half. Even when making the optimistic assumption that such a service would not loose more money per train-km ($16.49 in 2018, see table below) than VIA's current Corridor services, this bare-bone service would require a subsidy of $82.8 million, thus increasing VIA's deficit by no less than 30%:
Compiled from:
VIA Rail Annual Report 2018 with train-mileage figures I presented in
post #5,996
But what if we ran buses instead? Sadly, we know that the national network of intercity buses was not profitable and I unfortunately couldn't locate any figures which would allow to estimate Greyhound's deficit per bus-km. Nevertheless, we do have sufficient data do this for Ontario Northland (ON) and if I've correctly compiled the frequencies from the current schedules published on the Ontario Northland website, they operate 3.8 million bus-km and 156 thousand train-km on the
Polar Bear Express:
Compiled from: schedules published on
Ontario Northland website and distances obtained with Google Maps
As imperfect as this data is (most notably: the most recent Annual Report covers the 12 months up to June 30, 2018 while the current timetables appear to have taken effect in November 2019), both documents taken together suggests that Ontario Northland's costs of operating buses is only between $3 and $4 per bus-km (depending on whether we include only operational expenses or also all other expense categories) and the deficit is just under $1:
Compiled from: table posted above this one and
Ontario Northland's 2017-2018 Annual Report (p. 34)
I hate travelling by coach (i.e. intercity bus) at least as much as everyone else here, but from a taxpayer perspective, they are dramatically preferable over rural rail services...